Aspirin Can Prevent Bowel Cancer

May 14, 2007

AspirinDaily high dose Aspirin of 300mg can dramatically reduce the risk of developing bowel cancer.

Bowel cancer is a big cause of morbidity in Singapore. The ability to reduce the risk of developing this disease with a simple Aspirin tablet could dramatically change a Nation’s health.

Daily treatment is needed for at least 5 years before the benefits are seen. The patients were treated in the 70s and 80s and followed up for the last 20 years. The treatment group saw a reduction in deaths from bowel cancer by 74%!

The risk reduction did not depend on age, sex, race or country of origin.

We recently saw that high doses of Aspirin can increase the risk of haemorrhagic stroke in the elderly. Aspirin can also increase the risk of gastro-intestinal bleeding.

We also know that low-dose Aspirin is cardio-protective. Further studies need to be done to see if Aspirin 75mg per day can protect against bowel cancer too.

In the meantime, daily Aspirin at 300mg should be considered for individuals at high risk of bowel cancer.


Optimal Dose of Aspirin for Heart Protection

May 9, 2007

Aspirin

Aspirin is back in the news again. Researchers have finally revealed that very low doses of Aspirin are enough for cardio-protection, without putting the patients at risk of strokes.

This is good news, as recent reports suggested that prophylactic Aspirin intake in asymptomatic elderly can increase their risk of haemorrhagic strokes. This means that taking low doses of Aspirin can protect us from heart attacks without increasing our risk from strokes caused by bleeding in the brain.

High doses of Aspirin can also cause bleeding in the gastro-intestinal tract.

The latest evidence shows that a daily dose of aspirin of 75 to 81mg is the best for the long-term prevention of heart disease and strokes, without causing any serious side effects.

There is no evidence that taking higher doses has any increased benefits.

Source: Forbes


Aspirin May Increase Stroke Risk in Elderly

May 2, 2007

Aspirin

Healthy older people who take regular aspirin to prevent stroke may actually be increasing their risk. A UK study has revealed that the number of strokes associated with blood-thinning drugs such as aspirin or warfarin has risen seven-fold in the last 25 years.

An article in The Lancet reports that the risk is particularly high in the over 75s and aspirin may do more harm than good in healthy older people.

Researchers at the University of Oxford compared figures on intracerebral haemorrhagic stroke - a type of stroke caused by bleeding in the brain - from 1981-85 and 2002-06.

They found that the number of strokes caused by high blood pressure had fallen by 65%, which in the under 75s meant the overall rate of strokes had halved.

But in the over 75s the stroke rate remained the same over the 25-year period. There has been an increase in the number of strokes in patients taking blood thinning drugs: the proportion of patients on antithrombotic drugs was 4% in the initial study period, but two decades later this had risen to 40%.

People with cardiovascular disease, who have a high risk of blood clot, are prescribed drugs like aspirin to thin the blood and reduce the risk of a heart attack or stroke. But many healthy older people also take a regular aspirin in an attempt to ward off a stroke.

Study leader, Professor Peter Rothwell, said the increasing use of drugs such as aspirin may soon take over high blood pressure as the leading cause of intracerebral haemorrhagic stroke in the over 75s. He warned than in healthy older adults the risks of taking aspirin may outweigh any benefits.

“GPs have been treating high blood pressure very aggressively and that is bringing dividends but there are other causes of stroke in the elderly which have become important.

“There are good reasons for taking aspirin or warfarin but there are elderly who take aspirin as a lifestyle choice and in that situation the trials have shown there’s no benefit.

“And what our study suggests is that, particularly in the very elderly, the risks of aspirin outweigh the benefits,” he said.

This new evidence indicates that if you are healthy and have a low risk of heart disease or stroke and unless advised by your GP to take aspirin on a daily basis then the increased risks from the side effects of aspirin are likely to outweigh the benefits of preventing a stroke.

People can lower their risk of stroke by having regular blood pressure checks, eating a healthy diet, quitting smoking, drinking alcohol in moderation, reducing salt intake and taking regular exercise.