A study published in the European Heart Journal reported that only one out of 50 women who received aspirin for a decade could benefit from it in order to avoid a heart attack.
Dr from the Utrecht Medical Center in The Netherlands. Scientists, led by Jannick Dorresteijn, investigated the effects of aspirin on 28,000 healthy women aged 45 and over USA Analyzed the results of a research conducted in Turkey.
Noting that aspirin use has adverse side effects such as bleeding ulcers and blood thinning effects on the body causing bruises, researchers have found that aspirin is the beneficiary of the aspirin, given that healthy women reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke from only 2.4 percent to 2.4 percent not higher than the loss.
The study, which also touched on the financial aspect of the matter, pointed out that while aspirin is a cheap drug, many people have negative effects on the budget allocated for health services.
Experts say that the research has given similar results to two large-scale surveys conducted earlier this year. In the research, experts say that aspirin in one of the cases prevents heart attack at a very low rate, but there is no effect on stroke with mortality rates. In a study of 1111 men and women who received an aspirin every day during the study, aspirin reported that only one case prevented death.
"Only a very small number of women benefit from aspirin," said Dorresteijn, who explains what they have done. "If you treat 49 people with aspirin, you should not treat anyone with aspirin, because only one person would benefit from it."
Dorresteijn said that women over 65 years of age may benefit from the use of aspirin to prevent heart attacks and strokes, but "the benefit of women in this age group is very small." Only 49 women should be given aspirin which creates frustration because you want a medicine to be effective, "he said.
In the medical world, it is widely accepted that patients with heart attacks or stroke may benefit from the use of aspirin, but it is not clear that aspirin is the main method of heart attack and stroke prevention.
USPSTF recommends the use of aspirin to protect against the risk of heart attack in men between the ages of 45 and 75 and women between the ages of 55 and 79 when the benefit provided is higher than the risk of bleeding eventually resulting from aspirin use.
Dr. USPSTF. Michael Lefevre said he did not surprise himself with the results of the study, even though he has blurred the potential benefit of aspirin to prevent the aspiration, adding to the analyst's heart attack that he did.
Noting that the number of women who need to be treated with aspirin depends on the primary risk status of these women to prevent asymptomatic care, Lefever says that when 50 women are treated with aspirin to benefit only 1 woman with a serious bleeding risk, 19's.
Lefever pointed out that the results of the study show that 32 out of 1000 females could be protected from aspirin-treated 60 year-olds, whereas 12 had a bleeding ulcer due to aspirin use.
The United States, which was consulted on the subject, Dr. Luke's-Roosvelt, who runs the blood pressure program at the Hospital. Franz Messerli noted that there are better ways to reduce the risk of stroke than the aspiration.
Stressing that the most important risk factor in stroke angle is tension, Messerli said that it is very important for people to keep their blood pressure under control. Noting that this can be achieved through changes in diet and exercise habits and medications used to treat blood pressure, Messerli underscored that some of the most promising developments, but not yet solved, have been the subject of heart attack and deprivation.
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