Painkiller weakens anti-clotting action of aspirin
December 15th, 2009 - 2:43 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Dec 15 (ANI): People who take painkiller Celebrex and also take a low-dose aspirin tablet daily to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke might not be getting enough protection because the former drug keeps the aspirin from doing its job effectively, according to a new study.
In laboratory studies, University of Michigan researchers found that several coxibs, the drug class to which Celebrex belongs, interfere with aspirin’s ability to discourage blood clots, if the aspirin is taken in low doses.
Celebrex, also known as celecoxib, is the only coxib currently on the market.
Doctors frequently advise daily low-dose aspirin (81 mg) for patients who have heart conditions, notably a serious form of angina known as unstable angina, or for patients who are at risk of second heart attacks.
Aspirin is well known for its ability to discourage formation of blood clots that can lead to heart attack and stroke.
In addition, arthritis patients who take Celebrex regularly are often put on low-dose aspirin because this is thought to counteract Celebrex’s own potential clot-promoting effect.
“There are many people who take low-dose aspirin, perhaps as many as half of men over 50. If they are also prescribed Celebrex for arthritis or other pain, our results suggest that the Celebrex will probably interfere with the aspirin’s action,” said Dr. William L. Smith, the study’s senior author.
“The greatest risk is having people take Celebrex who are taking aspirin for cardiovascular problems that are known to be mitigated by aspirin, including patients with unstable angina or those at risk for a second heart attack,” he said.
In unstable angina, small clots form in arteries and interfere with blood flow.
Previous studies of healthy subjects found no ill effect on blood clotting when Celebrex was combined with aspirin at higher doses, specifically a daily “regular” aspirin tablet (324 mg), Smith notes.
So it may be that a higher aspirin dose, or spreading out the time between taking low-dose aspirin and Celebrex, will allow aspirin to be effective.
Aspirin’s undesirable effects on the gastrointestinal tract at higher doses when taken long-term would have to be taken into account.
While the effect seen in the study needs to be replicated in studies of low-dose aspirin and Celebrex in people, perhaps in older patients, who have conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, said Smith.
If the effect holds true in people, it will be important to determine if a balance in dose and/or dose regimens can be found so that aspirin and Celebrex can both be effective.
The results appear online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)
- An aspirin a day 'cuts cancer death rate by 50pc' - Dec 07, 2010
- Aspirin may cut the risk of pancreatic cancer - Apr 05, 2011
- Low iron levels tied to blood clot risk - Dec 15, 2011
- Experts discourage younger diabetic patients from using Aspirin - Jun 02, 2010
- Taking aspirin for heart disease prevention is less costly, more effective - Feb 23, 2011
- 'Muscle cramp drug better than aspirin in preventing strokes' - Sep 12, 2010
- Mother's stroke history 'can help predict daughter's heart attack risk' - Feb 02, 2011
- Drugs combo 'yields up to nearly 10 pc weight loss' - Apr 11, 2011
- A heart pill that halves risk of death - Nov 15, 2010
- Everyone over 45 should take aspirin daily: Study - Nov 24, 2010
- Aspirin advised for everyone over 45 to keep heart disease, cancer at bay - Nov 24, 2010
- Taking aspirin daily 'cuts prostate cancer risk by 30pc' - Aug 12, 2010
- Aspirin 'cuts bowel cancer risk' - Sep 16, 2010
- Aspirin improves survival in postmenopausal women with heart disease - Mar 13, 2009
- Aspirin improves survival in women with heart disease - Mar 16, 2009
Tags: action of aspirin, arthritis patients, aspi, aspirin tablet, blood clots, cardiovascular problems, celebrex, coxib, coxibs, heart attack, heart attacks, heart conditions, ill effect, laboratory studies, low dose aspirin, mg smith, michigan researchers, risk of heart attack, unstable angina, william l smith