Two months ago I stopped my 81 mg/day aspirin. The stoppage was recommended by an ER doctor after my stomach bleed, more specifically, the duodenum. I knew it was happening by noticing black stools but I had more important things to do, so I thought, and by the time I went to the ER my hemoglobin was 6.9 mg/dl (normal for men is 13.1-17.5 mg/dl). My red blood count was similarly about half normal. It was difficult just to walk. I've been monitoring HBG and RBC because of hemolysis which is much improved since the fix of my valve leak in Nov '23.
After listening to the lecture posted by pellicle, I'm considering restarting aspirin maybe at half the dose or taking the 81 mg every other day. The aspirin was originally recommended by my cardiologist.
On a related topic, I recently asked my cardiologist if I could stop statins because of some papers I read that statin drugs are causing more problems than they are solving:
For an example click here. And over a decade ago I read the Jupiter study which concluded that statin therapy did indeed reduce cardiovascular event rates from atherogenesis but the benefits were more related to the statin's anti-inflammatory properties than its cholesterol lowering properties. Well aspirin is a great anti-inflammatory drug and it's a lot cheaper than statins. The cited example study from Japan was published in 2015 so I thought that in all those years, new evidence in support of statins had superseded it. However, I'm still seeing articles saying statins can exacerbate CHF, joint pain, arteriolosclerosis, energy deficit, DNA damage, vitamin K2 deficiency and more.
When I asked my cardiologist about stopping statins based on these studies, here is his answer:
"The data on statins is extraordinarily positive. The recent studies talking about coronary calcium and statins are completely misconstruing what is happening. With statins, calcification increases because there is healing of plaque. Statins are anti-inflammatory as well as antiatherosclerotic. They are the backbone of preventing problems in your vein bypasses, and they have been utilized since 1990 . Not a single well done study suggests that there is a deleterious effect on cerebral function, long-term liver function, cardiac muscle function, or coronary artery disease. There are some people with genetic alterations that have muscle problems but that manifests itself in a fulminant way. Statins can exacerbate glucose intolerance and in patients who are destined to have diabetes, accelerate the onset of the diabetes by about 6 months. Statins can be associated with osteoporosis, in sedentary people with poor diets. I would not be in a rush to stop it."