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Tuesday Study: Aspirin May Lower Risk Of Death In Women(CBS News) CHICAGO Aspirin in low-to-moderate doses may lower the risk of death in women, particularly those who are older and prone to heart disease, a 24-year study of nearly 80,000 women suggests. However, experts cautioned that the results are not definitive and that women shouldn't take aspirin as a health preventive without talking to their doctor. In this long-running study of nurses who were middle-aged and older, women who took aspirin had a 25 percent lower risk of death compared to those who never took it. Aspirin-takers had a 38 percent lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and a 12 percent lower risk of death from cancer. Many doctors advise people who've had heart attacks and strokes to take a daily 81-milligram baby aspirin, costing less than 50 cents a week. The new study suggests aspirin may help healthy women, too. No benefit was found for high doses, which the study defined as two or more standard 325-milligram aspirin tablets a day. "This confirms what we already know: Aspirin is good for you, whether you're a man, whether you're a woman," said Dr. Jeffrey Berger of Duke University Medical Center who studies aspirin's effects. He was not involved in the new research and receives no money from aspirin makers. However, since aspirin can cause ulcers and bleeding, Berger said, women should talk to their doctors before taking it to prevent disease. "It's not a little vitamin; it's not a sugar pill," he said....[MORE] |
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