New daily aspirin guidelines: 3 things to know
Posted: October 7, 2019
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Talk with your care provider about the benefits and risks of daily aspirin use.[/caption]
If you do not have heart disease, taking once daily aspirin to protect your heart may do more harm than good, according to new research. Daily aspirin can help prevent heart attacks, but in patients without previous heart trouble, the risk of internal bleeding caused by aspirin is greater than the possible benefit.
Aspirin can prevent blood clots from forming, which reduces the risk of heart attack. On the other hand, if you have internal bleeding, clots help prevent that bleeding from getting worse. Because aspirin inhibits clots from forming, a small bleed can turn into a more serious one if you are taking daily aspirin.
The guidelines
The American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association came out with specific new guidelines for aspirin in adults, which USA Today summarized this way:- People over 70 who don't have heart disease – or are younger but at increased risk of bleeding – should avoid daily aspirin for prevention of heart disease.
- Only certain 40- to 70-year-olds who don't have heart disease are at high enough risk to warrant 75 to 100 milligrams of aspirin daily, and that's for a doctor to decide.



