marcusmarcusrc: (Default)
marcusmarcusrc ([personal profile] marcusmarcusrc) wrote2012-04-23 06:58 pm

Aspirin?

So, my mom has gotten hold of the forwarding bug, and in return, I have taken to consulting snopes fairly frequently in the hopes of limiting the wrongness that is being forwarded around the internet. Recently, she forwarded a document which accused aspirin of being responsible for a very large number of deaths, mainly due to the very large number of aspirin consumed, with blood thinning being the mortality factor. My google-fu failed me: while I was able to come up with a large number of websites citing the deaths (including some accusing aspirin of 1918 Spanish Flu mortality), none of them were what I considered to be reputable sources, and in contrast, I was unable to find any reputable sources which discussed the aspirin mortality claim either pro-or-con.

(the aspirin-Reyes syndrome link seems more solid, as do the benefits of aspirin for several conditions)

Any of my medically-competent friends want to weigh in here?

[identity profile] puffy-wuffy.livejournal.com 2012-04-24 01:22 am (UTC)(link)
Okay, I don't think aspirin used occasionally will kill someone, but it prevents blood clotting unlike other NSAIDs. Like other NSAIDs, it can cause damage to anywhere in your GI tract, usually some kind of ulceration (ulcer+blood thinning=bad bad bad). So . . . if used continuously and along with other NSAIDs, I think it could increase risk of ulceration and ulcer bleeds and maybe infection, which is bad, but these kind of conditions are treatable. I can understand the line of reasoning which could link aspirin to death, but I haven't seen a published study that I would trust which successfully links aspirin to mortality . . . yet.

[identity profile] arcanology.livejournal.com 2012-04-24 11:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh man, that must be maddening.

[identity profile] kirisutogomen.livejournal.com 2012-04-25 10:54 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't have time to follow through, but when I have questions like this I usually start with PubChem. But you're a government-employed chemist, so you already checked there.