Scottish Daily Mail

How taking aspirin every day ‘could help you to get pregnant’

- From Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent in Baltimore b.spencer@dailymail.co.uk

WOMEN trying for a baby should take a quarter of an aspirin a day, one of the world’s top fertility experts recommends.

Professor Richard Paulson advises that a low daily dose of the drug will help them conceive.

Aspirin is known to promote blood flow to the pelvis and to thicken the lining of womb, which helps women get pregnant.

The latest research suggests it also decreases inflammati­on problems, further increasing the chance of conception.

A study found that women who had previously miscarried were more likely to become pregnant if they took a daily low does of aspirin.

But Professor Paulson, vice-president of the American Society for Reproducti­ve Medicine (ASRM), says any woman should take the drug to increase their chance of a quick conception – even if they have previously had no fertility problems.

This goes against the advice of some experts because aspirin can have side-effects.

Professor Paulson was responding to the results of a study to be presented today at the annual ASRM conference in Baltimore.

Researcher­s from Utah University found that women who had previously miscarried were 17 per cent more likely to become pregnant if they took low-dose aspirin each day. They monitored 1,200 women aged 18 to 40 who were known to suffer from systemic inflammati­on problems and had miscarried in the last 12 months.

Those who took 81mg aspirin each day – roughly a quarter of a standard 300mg tablet sold for pain relief – were more likely to conceive. The pregnancie­s were 20 per cent more likely to end in a successful birth, the researcher­s said.

Professor Paulson, a consultant gynaecolog­ist at the University of Southern California, has for years advised patients undergoing fertility treatment to take a low dose of aspirin. But he added that any

‘We need to be slightly cautious’

woman trying to start a family should take the drug.

‘Unless they are allergic or have a gastric condition, I would certainly advise them to take it, there is no harm,’ he said.

Aspirin, which thins the blood and reduces inflammati­on, has been found to ward off the threat of diseases including cancer.

Some doctors advise that it is taken routinely in low doses as a general preventati­ve medication.

But while considered safe for most adults, for one in ten it can cause side effects such as digestive problem and bleeding.

And in asthmatics it can cause swelling of the lips, mouth or throat. In very rare cases, aspirin can cause haemorrhag­ic stroke.

Not all experts back Professor Paulson’s advice. Coventry-based gynaecolog­ist Richard Kennedy said: ‘The evidence does not support its routine use in IVF.’

Dr Stuart Lavery, a fertility expert at Imperial College London, said: ‘We need to be slightly cautious. Aspirin is too blunt an instrument to recommend this to everybody.’

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