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  1. Apr 20, 2023 · Side effects and complications of taking daily aspirin include: Stroke caused by a burst blood vessel. While daily aspirin can help prevent a clot-related stroke, it may increase the risk of a bleeding stroke. A bleeding stroke also is called a hemorrhagic stroke. Gastrointestinal bleeding.

    • Proposing New Guidelines
    • Should You Keep Taking Aspirin?
    • Gathering Feedback
    • What Experts Say
    • Evidence—And Guidance—Evolves
    • Is Taking Aspirin Ever Worth It?

    While it’s long-standing, the recommendation for most older adults to take daily low-dose aspirin as prevention has not gone unquestioned. In recent years, aspirin’s potential value in cardiovascular disease prevention has been de-emphasized, while lifestyle changes that patients can make to improve their heart health and circulation have been give...

    The new recommendations that are being proposed by the Task Force do not apply to people who are currently taking daily low-dose aspirinbecause they have already had a heart attack or stroke. Chien-Wen Tseng, MD, MPH, a member of the Task Force and the associate research director in the department of family medicine and community health at the Univ...

    While the Task Force's recommendations are not binding, Tseng says that the group’s guidelines “often become U.S. health policy.” For example, recent guidelines have covered screenings for lung cancer and vitamin D deficiency. The new Task Force guidelines on aspirin use are considered to be draft recommendations for the time being because the publ...

    After the Task Force released its draft guidelines, cardiovascular medicine experts weighed in on the proposed changes. The American Heart Association’s volunteer president, Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, responded by reiterating the stance of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association’s primary prevention recommendationsfrom 20...

    Michos understands that people may see the updated guidance and be concerned that something that was previously recommended is now being discouraged, but she says that “evidence accrues over time” and as a result, guidelines can evolve and change. While the new guidelines from the Task Force are being released now, Tseng says the committee started ...

    Aspirin’s potential to prevent heart attacks and strokes is not what’s being challenged by the Task Force; rather, it’s the risk of bleeding that comes with daily use. That’s why research is ongoing to determine which patients could safely take aspirin and reap the benefits. Jeffrey Berger, MD, director of the Center for the Prevention of Cardiovas...

    • Fran Kritz
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  3. Jul 10, 2023 · According to Weinrauch, for patients younger than age 60 with a 10-year risk of stroke and/or heart attack that’s 10% or higher, “there may be a small benefit” to daily low-dose aspirin. “While the risk of continuing aspirin is a higher risk of bleeding and/or iron deficiency anemia, the risk of discontinuing is a slightly higher risk ...

  4. Oct 13, 2021 · Here’s What to Know. Based on new evidence, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force says daily low-dose aspirin in people 60 years old or older has no net benefit due to an increased risk of ...

    • George Citroner
  5. Feb 3, 2022 · Aspirin thins the blood (that’s how it prevents blood clots), so it’s no surprise that taking a daily aspirin increases the risk of internal bleeding. "Usually, it causes bleeding in the gastrointestinal tract (primarily the stomach and small intestines), but bleeding can also occur in other areas of the body," says Dr. D'Souza.

  6. Jan 3, 2023 · Most heart attacks and strokes occur when blood flow to the heart or brain is blocked by a blood clot. Aspirin works by “thinning” the blood and preventing the formation of clots. But aspirin can cause complications. When blood cannot clot easily, excessive bleeding can occur. A burst blood vessel in the brain can cause a hemorrhagic stroke.

  7. Daily aspirin use has been shown to lower risk of heart attack or stroke, but aspirin can also increase the risk for bleeding in the brain, stomach and intestines. Although the absolute risk of a ...

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