International News

Aspirin increases bleeding risk in older stroke patients: study

PARIS, June 14 (APP/AFP) – Long-term, daily use of
aspirin to prevent blood clots in very elderly patients leads to an increased risk of serious or fatal internal bleeding, researchers said Wednesday.
Heartburn medication would allows people 75 years and older to keep
the preventative benefits of aspirin while avoiding its dangerous side-effects, they reported in the medical journal The Lancet.
Even among people with no history of heart problems or stroke, the
risk of gastrointestinal bleeding goes up with age for aspirin users, other research has shown.
Roughly half of all adults 75 and over in the US and Europe take
small daily doses of aspirin — ranging from 75 to 150 milligrams — or other clot-inhibiting drugs.
A normal dose for a headache is 325 to 600 mg.
Lifelong treatment with such medications is especially recommended
for patients who have suffered a heart attack or stroke.
But the clinical tests underlying these recommendations involved
mostly patients younger than 75 who had taken aspirin for only a couple years.
As a result, how much the risk of bleeding might rise with age was
largely unknown.