The Asian Age

Aspirin does not cut heart attack, stroke risk

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Melbourne: Taking aspirin daily does not reduce the heart attack or stroke and has no benefit in prolonging life free of disability, a study has found. Aspirin- related compounds have been used for the treatment of pain since the 16th century BC, when it was reported that people chewed on the bark of willow and papyrus. It was first synthesise­d in 1898, and since the 1960s has been known to lower the risk of heart attack and stroke among those who had previously experience­d heart disease or stroke. This protective capacity of aspirin was extrapolat­ed to people who were otherwise healthy to prevent a first heart attack or stroke, despite the evidence supporting this to be sparse. In three studies, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, researcher­s showed that daily low- dose aspirin ( 100mg), when initiated in otherwise healthy people from age 70 onwards, has no benefit in prolonging life free of disability, or substantia­lly reducing the risk of having a first heart attack or stroke. Over 19,000 people in Australia and the US were studied over seven years for the study was called ASPREE — Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly. The results showed that low- dose aspirin did not prolong healthy life. Nor did it prolong life or substantia­lly reduce the incidence of heart attack or stroke — with little difference between the placebo and aspirin groups. “The takehome message of such a complex, large, placebocon­trolled study is that healthy older people contemplat­ing how best to preserve their health will be unlikely to benefit from aspirin,” said John McNeil, a professor at the Monash University in Australia.

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