I'm pretty sure that's dangerous to your health. If your blood becomes too thin and you get a cut your blood will be unable to clot and the cut will keep bleeding.
no
No warfarin tablets are blood thinning tablets and should definitely not be confused with aspirin.
Can I take coumadin and immodium at the same time
It would probably not be a good idea to use tyenol with a blodd thineer... Your blood count may decrease. It has a similar mechanism to Asprin which is a COX-1 and COX-2 inhibtor. So to a certain extent it contatin a blood thinner but not as much as aspirin. Tyelenol is reffered to as acetimnophen. Please pray for me to get a position residecny no matter what GOD WILLING
Slimmer means the same as thinner.
I found this: Ibuprofen does not thin the blood like aspirin does. At higher doses of ibuprofen(ie. 800 mg three times a day) there can be a potential for thinning of the blood but it is a "reversible" effect where as aspirin has an "irreversible" effect. If you are only taking over the counter doses once or twice a day there is probably no clinically significant thinning. Aspirin can be taken daily to help protect the heart by preventing blood clots. Ibuprofen does not have the same effects. ---- Fresh evidence adds to suspicions that ibuprofen could be dangerous for most heart patients because it can block the blood-thinning benefits of aspirin. Scientists believe ibuprofen clogs a channel inside a clotting protein that aspirin acts on. Aspirin gets stuck behind the ibuprofen and cannot get to where it is supposed to go to thin the blood.
No, Ibuprofen is a is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug . Aspirin is analgesic to relieve minor aches and pains, as an antipyretic to reduce fever, and as an anti-inflammatory medication. Ibuprofen's common side effect is an upset stomach. Aspirin also thins the blood so bleeding risk increases.
it does NOT
Is b Is Bufferin the same thing or very similar to coated aspirin? ufferin
Yes, aspirin raises blood pressure if taken in the morning.A study in Spain gave the following results (source page at the Related Links):One group wasn't given any aspirin (169 people). A second group took 100 milligrams of aspirin every morning (77 people). A third group took the same dose of aspirin at night (82 people).All patients wore devices that monitored their blood pressure around the clock. Blood pressure readings were automatically recorded every 20 minutes during the day and every half hour at night.Study's ResultsAfter three months, these were the results:Aspirin at night: Significant drop in blood pressureAspirin in the morning: Slightly higher blood pressureNo aspirin: Slightly lower blood pressureThe biggest blood pressure change was in the patients who took aspirin at night, the study shows.How much did their blood pressure drop?Systolic blood pressure (the top number): down 6.8Diastolic blood pressure (the bottom number): down 1.6For more information visit the Related Link.
The singular form of "aspirin" is "aspirin." It's one of those words where the singular and plural are the same!
No. Aleve does have an anti-platelet effect but it's shorter in duration than that provided by aspirin. Further, it will interfere with the anti-platelet effect of aspirin if taken in parallel with aspirin.