Examples
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| Aspirin | Ascriptin [aspirin combined with an antacid], Bayer, Bufferin, Ecotrin |
How It Works
When aspirin is chewed, it works quickly (within 15 minutes) to
prevent the formation of blood clots. This decreases the chance that a blood
clot will form and block a narrowed heart artery, leading to a heart
attack.
Brand-name aspirin is no more effective than generic or store
brands.
Why It Is Used
It has been well documented that aspirin reduces the risk of heart
attack in people with known
coronary artery disease (CAD). It is also now
understood that aspirin lowers the risk of having symptoms for people who have
a higher risk for the disease. People who are at high risk for coronary artery
disease or who already have coronary artery disease benefit the most from
aspirin therapy.
You can take aspirin to help you during a
heart attack. After you call
911 or other emergency services, chew 1
adult-strength aspirin (325 mg) if you are not allergic to aspirin and if there
is no other reason that you can't take aspirin. Aspirin slows blood clotting,
so a blood clot that is causing the heart attack stays smaller.
You may also take low-dose aspirin (81 mg) every day to help lower
the risk of a heart attack or
stroke. Low-dose aspirin may be used:
- After a heart attack, to prevent another one.
- By
people who have coronary artery disease.
- By people with
stable angina.
- By people with
unstable angina.
- After
bypass surgery or
angioplasty.
- By people who have had a
stroke or
transient ischemic attack (TIA).
- After
surgery to prevent a stroke (carotid endarterectomy).
- By healthy
men over age 40 who have one or more risk factors for heart disease, as long as
their blood pressure is controlled and the benefits of aspirin are greater than
the risks.
-
By healthy women over age 65, or women under 65 who have one or more risk
factors for heart disease as long as their blood pressure is controlled and the
benefits of aspirin are greater than the risks.
If you have
atrial fibrillation and cannot take or choose not to
take warfarin, you may take an adult-strength aspirin (325 mg) every day to
help lower the risk of a stroke.
How Well It Works
Aspirin and coronary artery disease
(CAD)
People who are at high risk for coronary artery disease or who
have established coronary artery disease benefit the most from aspirin
therapy.
- For people at increased risk for CAD, studies
have shown that aspirin therapy reduces the risk of developing symptomatic CAD
by 28%.1
- For people at low risk for CAD,
the risks of aspirin therapy may outweigh the benefits.1
People who have established CAD also appear to benefit from aspirin
therapy. One large study has shown that people aged 65 and older with both
heart failure and coronary artery disease had a significantly lower death rate
when they took aspirin on a regular basis.2
Aspirin and heart attacks
- Aspirin reduces the risk of death and heart
attack in people with unstable angina.3
- Aspirin decreases the risk of first heart attack,
death from heart attack, and recurrent heart attacks.4
- Aspirin may help reduce the severity of a heart
attack when it is chewed and taken immediately after symptoms begin.
Side Effects
Side effects of aspirin include:
- Inflammation of the stomach
(gastritis).
- Gastrointestinal bleeding.
- Allergic
reaction.
- Increased bruising and bleeding (hemorrhage) in the brain
(rare) or other internal organs of the body.
If you have other conditions or risk factors that increase your
risk of stroke or bleeding, you may not be a good candidate for aspirin
therapy. The risk of bleeding is greater for people with uncontrolled high
blood pressure who already take antiplatelet medications, anticoagulants (blood
thinners), or anti-inflammatory medications.
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference
is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
Aspirin may be combined with heparin and possibly newer
antiplatelet drugs such as abciximab (ReoPro), eptifibatide (Integrilin), and
clopidogrel (Plavix) before and after angioplasty to treat unstable
angina.
Some doctors believe that people who have two or more risk factors
for coronary artery disease should take aspirin every day. Others are concerned
that long-term daily aspirin use will increase the risk of stomach problems or
stroke when untreated high blood pressure is present.
Any
over-the-counter aspirin product will work. No single
brand works better than another for preventing coronary artery disease or heart
attacks.
The best dose of aspirin has not been established; however, 75 mg
a day seems to be as effective in preventing heart attack as higher doses and
has fewer side effects.5 One low-dose aspirin contains
81 mg; one regular-strength aspirin contains about 325 mg.
Consult your doctor before using aspirin on a regular basis.
Because of its effect on blood clotting, your doctor may want you
to stop your aspirin at least 5 days before surgery or before a dental
procedure that may cause excessive bleeding.
Even though
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), such as
ibuprofen and naproxen, relieve pain and inflammation much like aspirin does,
do not substitute NSAIDs for aspirin because they will not lower your risk of
another heart attack. If you need to take NSAIDs for a long time, talk with
your doctor to see if it is safe for you. Some research suggests that long-term
use of these medicines may raise your risk for coronary artery disease.
If you need both aspirin and a pain reliever every day, talk to
your doctor about what pain reliever you should take. If you take
uncoated aspirin and ibuprofen at the same time, the
aspirin may not work as well to prevent a heart attack. You may be able to use
acetaminophen instead of ibuprofen to treat your pain. But if ibuprofen is your
only option, avoid taking it during the 8 hours before
and the 30 minutes after your aspirin dose.6 For example, you can take ibuprofen 30 minutes after your
aspirin dose. If you take ibuprofen once in a while, it does not seem to cause
problems.
Experts do not know if NSAIDs other than ibuprofen interfere with
uncoated aspirin. Also, experts do not know if people
who take a daily coated aspirin should be concerned
about ibuprofen or other NSAIDs interacting with the aspirin. Talk to you
doctor if you take these medicines every day.
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