Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 > Fri, 9 Jul 2004 09:54:09 +0200 > " Sepp (Josef) Hasslberger " <sepp > Aspirin dangerous for health of heart > patients. > > From the site of Mercola - > > copied below is an article on aspirin and warfarin > being ineffective > and dangerous for people with heart disease - so > much for the > " dangerous " interaction of herbs with warfarin. It's > the drug itself > that's dangerous and useless. > > Let the medicine proponents prove their risk/benefit > ratio first. > > (That brings to mind a recent > <http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/329/7456/0-g>BMJ > > editorial on the subject of medical harm which has > attracted some > interesting comments in the subsequent discussion on > BMJ's website)... > > Kind regards > Sepp > > > <http://mercola.com/blog/2004/jul/8/aspirin_dangerous_and_ineffective_for_people\ _with_heart_failure>Aspirin > > Dangerous and Ineffective for People With Heart > Failure > > Using aspirin for heart disease has been > controversial for years, > and now aspirin is in the news again. People with > heart failure are > often put on blood-thinning regimens with aspirin or > sometimes > Coumadin (warfarin), but a new study indicates that > this is not > helpful and could even be harmful. Results from the > Warfarin/Aspirin > Study in Heart Failure (WASH) show that aspirin and > warfarin provide > no meaningful benefit to patients with heart > failure. Further, those > participants who received aspirin were twice as > likely as patients on > warfarin to be hospitalized or to die of a > cardiovascular cause and > were significantly more likely to have serious > gastrointestinal > events. > > A better and safer option than aspirin is > Nattokinase, a powerful > enzyme--derived from the food natto--that can > dissolve blood clots > and has been used safely for over 20 years. Rivaling > pharmaceutical > agents, Nattokinase seems to have longer lasting > beneficial action > without the potential for abnormal bleeding. Watch > for more news > about Nattokinase soon as we will offer this very > potent all natural > enzyme on the site this fall. > > > > The Warfarin/Aspirin Study in Heart failure (WASH): > a randomized > trial comparing antithrombotic strategies for > patients with heart > failure. > > Cleland JG, Findlay I, Jafri S, Sutton G, Falk R, > Bulpitt C, Prentice > C, Ford I, Trainer A, Poole-Wilson PA. > > http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=pubmed & dopt=Abstra\ ct & list_uids=15215806 > > Academic Unit, Department of Cardiology, Castlehill > Hospital, > University of Hull, Kingston upon Hull, United > Kingdom. > J.G.Cleland > > BACKGROUND: Heart failure is commonly associated > with vascular > disease and a high rate of athero-thrombotic events, > but the risks > and benefits of antithrombotic therapy are unknown. > METHODS: The > current study was an open-label, randomized, > controlled trial > comparing no antithrombotic therapy, aspirin (300 > mg/day), and > warfarin (target international normalized ratio 2.5) > in patients with > heart failure and left ventricular systolic > dysfunction requiring > diuretic therapy. The primary objective was to > demonstrate the > feasibility and inform the design of a larger > outcome study. The > primary clinical outcome was death, nonfatal > myocardial infarction, > or nonfatal stroke. RESULTS: Two hundred > seventy-nine patients were > randomized and 627 patient-years exposure were > accumulated over a > mean follow-up time of 27 +/- 1 months. Twenty-six > (26%), 29 (32%), > and 23 (26%) patients randomized to no > antithrombotic treatment, > aspirin, and warfarin, respectively, reached the > primary outcome > (ns). There were trends to a worse outcome among > those randomized to > aspirin for a number of secondary outcomes. > Significantly (P =.044) > more patients randomized to aspirin were > hospitalized for > cardiovascular reasons, especially worsening heart > failure. > CONCLUSIONS: The Warfarin/Aspirin Study in Heart > failure (WASH) > provides no evidence that aspirin is effective or > safe in patients > with heart failure. The benefits of warfarin for > patients with heart > failure in sinus rhythm have not been established. > Antithrombotic > therapy in patients with heart failure is not > evidence based but > commonly contributes to polypharmacy. > > > > -- > > The individual is supreme and finds its way through > intuition. > Sepp (Josef) Hasslberger > > Personal home page on physics,energy technology, > social > and economic issues: http://www.hasslberger.com > > Health Supreme: http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp > > Antiprohibition and products made from cannabis as a > raw > material: http://www.unsaccodicanapa.com > > Communication Agents: > http://www.communicationagents.com/ > > La Leva di Archimede - freedom of choice > main site: http://www.laleva.cc > news: http://www.laleva.org > > Robin Good - " Understanding comes from exploration " > http://www.masternewmedia.org > > Trash Your Television! > http://www.tvturnoff.org/ > > Not satisfied with news from the tube and other > controlled media? > Search the net! There are literally thousands of > alternative sources > out there. Start with the following links. (But > there are many more > sites with good, timely information.) > > http://www.whatreallyhappened.com > http://www.joevialls.co.uk/ > http://www.padrak.com/alt/911DD.html > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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