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Aspirin therapy: Are you up to speed on the latest guidelines?
Study Finds ^ | January 29, 2025 | Dr. Faith Coleman

Posted on 01/31/2025 5:40:55 AM PST by Red Badger

Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death in the United States, at a cost of about 700,000 lives per year. For decades, and as recently as 2022, doctors recommended that all healthy older people take a low dose (81 milligrams) of aspirin daily for primary prevention of heart disease and strokes.

When new research challenged the value of the benefits of prophylactic aspirin as a blanket recommendation for all older, healthier adults, the American College of Cardiology (ACC), the American Heart Association (AHA), and the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) amended their recommendations. They advise against daily aspirin for people with no history of heart disease, due to potentially dangerous side effects.

Despite this change in recommendations, research indicates that about 29 million Americans with no previous heart disease are still taking aspirin for prevention. About 6.6 million do so without a physician’s recommendation.

So, what’s right for you when it comes to aspirin?

There is no simple answer, according to Yale cardiologist Michael Nanna, MD. In Yale Medical News he explains, “It depends on a variety of factors, including a person’s age, risk factors and individual medical history.”

Cardiovascular disease defined

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the term for diseases of the heart and blood vessels – a wide range of conditions and events:

Coronary artery disease – Narrowing or blockage of the blood vessels that feed oxygen to the heart muscle

Arrhythmias – Irregular heartbeats

Hypertension – High blood pressure

Peripheral artery disease – Narrowing or blockage of the blood vessels supplying oxygen to organs other than the heart and to the limbs

Heart attack – Complete blockage of a coronary artery, preventing blood from reaching heart muscle

Heart failure – The heart’s pumping is insufficient to meet the body’s needs for oxygen.

Stroke – Blood supply to the brain is reduced or blocked, depriving the brain of oxygen. These can be caused by a blocked blood vessel or bursting of a blood vessel.

Risk factors for these conditions include:

High cholesterol

Smoking

Diabetes

Obesity

Poor diet, especially high fat

Physical inactivity

Excessive alcohol use

Why physicians previously recommended aspirin therapy

Aspirin is one of a group of drugs called nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. You’re familiar with the group; it includes ibuprofen (Motrin) and naprosyn (Aleve). Among its numerous uses, aspirin is a blood thinner. It prevents platelets (small blood components) from forming clots.

Blood clots are the leading cause of heart attacks and strokes. For that reason, doctors have, for decades, recommended that adults in their 50s and older take a low-dose (81 milligrams) aspirin daily to prevent the disorders listed above. This is primary prevention—a disease has not yet occurred. The term secondary prevention applies when there is a history of disease in an individual and the goal is preventing future events.

Why change the guidelines?

The guidelines changed because the risks of taking low-dose aspirin outweighed the benefits. Because it’s a blood thinner, aspirin can increase the risk of bleeding in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract or bleeding into the brain, which is a type of stroke. Older adults are already at increased risk for GI bleeding, bleeding into the brain as a type of stroke, and head trauma causing bleeding into the brain. Aspirin heightens all these risks.

In 2018, three important studies showed the benefits and risks of preventing CVD with aspirin. These were the ASPREE, ASCEND, and ARRIVE studies. Two of the studies showed no benefit but increased risk of bleeding. One study showed a slight reduction in CVD risk, but also at the expense of increased bleeding risk. The bleeding risks outweighed the potential benefits.

These studies were done as primary prevention. None of the participants had already experienced CVD. For patients who had already experienced a cardiac event or undergone bypass surgery, there is “strong evidence” that aspirin helps prevent another event, according to the Journal of the America Medical Association (JAMA). It was determined that for aspirin as secondary prevention the benefits outweigh the risks.

Current guidelines for primary prevention

In response to the 2018 studies, both the AHA and the ACC changed their recommendations. They advise considering preventive aspirin for individuals at substantial risk for CVD, ages 40-70, but aspirin should be discontinued at age 70.

The USPSTF updated its guidelines to recommend against starting aspirin for primary prevention of CVD in patients 60 and older. They advise that patients ages 40 to 59 with a 10% or greater 10-year risk for occurrence of CVD should be considered on an individual basis.

Is low-dose aspirin right for you? Most healthy older adults should not take preventive aspirin. For those who have been taking daily low-dose aspirin it should probably be discontinued. It’s a decision to make with your healthcare provider, considering your medical condition, age, family history, and other risk factors.

“This is about personalized medicine and shared decision-making,” Dr. Nanna says. “I take it on a case-by-case basis, where I’m weighing what I can estimate as a patient’s risk for heart attack and stroke and deciding whether that risk threshold is high enough that it would outweigh the bleeding risk associated with starting low-dose aspirin. And then I present the patient with that information, and we make a decision together.”

Read the full recommendations from the AHA/ACC and USPSTF.


TOPICS: Food; Health/Medicine; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: aspirin; heartdisease
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To: dfwgator

Yeah, same commie trash food pyramid crappola. It ain’t high unless it affects your blood.


41 posted on 01/31/2025 8:13:37 AM PST by bobbo666
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To: Red Badger

I have a photo of my father with 10 other Marines, from late 1944 or early 1945, somewhere in the Pacific, sitting around drinking beer. Lots of beer bottles on the table.


42 posted on 01/31/2025 8:22:45 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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*


43 posted on 01/31/2025 8:23:57 AM PST by Faith65 (Isaiah 40:31 )
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To: Verginius Rufus

Exactly...............


44 posted on 01/31/2025 8:24:04 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

Never the less, you should always carry two 325 mg aspirins.

Never leave home without them.


45 posted on 01/31/2025 8:48:19 AM PST by bert ( (KE. NP. +12) Where is ZORRO when California so desperately needs him?)
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To: bert

Got them right here in my desk drawer!................


46 posted on 01/31/2025 8:54:50 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: dfwgator

Exactly.
The anti fat, especially anti animal fat propadanda is precisely the root cause of the explosion of cardiovascular diseases.
This collective madness has to stop.


47 posted on 01/31/2025 12:33:20 PM PST by miniTAX
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To: dfwgator

‘You can eat a high-carb diet, or a high-fat diet.’

High-carbs is NOT a proper human diet. Indians eat high carb and they are the world capital of diabete. There has never have been a successful group of high-carb humans, never. If you think we must eat like cavemen, rightly so, then you are out of luck with high carbs. There was no carb in the caveman’s diet over the last ice age until 10,000 years ago where Germany was under hundreds feet of permanent ice and France’s soil was all permafrost.


48 posted on 01/31/2025 12:47:57 PM PST by miniTAX
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To: Ancesthntr

‘But simply reducing carbs will lessen the need for both statins and diabetes medications’

Why ‘simply reduce’ when you can simply eliminate all carbs and become diabete free with zero medication??? That has been tried and confirmed by thousands and thousands carnivores.
I don’t see the logic of doing just halfway something that reliably works.


49 posted on 01/31/2025 1:01:29 PM PST by miniTAX
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To: Red Badger

bookmark


50 posted on 01/31/2025 8:15:42 PM PST by simpson96
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To: Red Badger

I take low dose aspirin because of an elevated platelet level - it keeps them from sticking together.


51 posted on 02/01/2025 6:29:22 AM PST by glorgau
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To: Ancesthntr

“Big Pharma absolutely HATES it when people take cheap OTC meds”

Maybe that’s why they are taking Benedryl off the market, they loved it years ago when it was a prescription drug.


52 posted on 02/01/2025 6:39:10 AM PST by pepperdog ( )
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