I don't recall whether or not one of my doctors told me to take 81 mg aspirin (he or she may have said 'baby aspirin, which is also 81 mg). Many of us here take the 81 mg enteric coated aspirin.
When you're on warfarin, you don't want anything to add to the anticoagulation effects of warfarin. Aspirin does - using a different mechanism. It makes the platelets less 'sticky,' which can reduce the blood's ability to clot. Its effects, strangely, can't be detected by our INR meters.
I broke a wrist a few years ago. I told the doctor that I was taking an NSAID for the pain. He didn't like this - he told me that the NSAID can effect clotting and that I shouldn't take it when I take warfarin.
So - I take the 81 mg aspirin at night, once a day. If I have a lot of pain, I'll occasionally have a generic ibuprofen or two - but only when the pain is severe.
The reasoning for the 81 mg enteric coated aspirin -- it's supposed to help in some way (reduce risk of heart attack?), and it doesn't seem to have any negative effects. With no negative effects, if it can be of any value, why NOT take it? And, FWIW, if its effects are lower because it dissolves in the intestines, that may make it slightly safer than a pill that explodes in the stomach.
When you're on warfarin, you don't want anything to add to the anticoagulation effects of warfarin. Aspirin does - using a different mechanism. It makes the platelets less 'sticky,' which can reduce the blood's ability to clot. Its effects, strangely, can't be detected by our INR meters.
I broke a wrist a few years ago. I told the doctor that I was taking an NSAID for the pain. He didn't like this - he told me that the NSAID can effect clotting and that I shouldn't take it when I take warfarin.
So - I take the 81 mg aspirin at night, once a day. If I have a lot of pain, I'll occasionally have a generic ibuprofen or two - but only when the pain is severe.
The reasoning for the 81 mg enteric coated aspirin -- it's supposed to help in some way (reduce risk of heart attack?), and it doesn't seem to have any negative effects. With no negative effects, if it can be of any value, why NOT take it? And, FWIW, if its effects are lower because it dissolves in the intestines, that may make it slightly safer than a pill that explodes in the stomach.