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Related: About this forumLow-dose aspirin can reduce the risk of ICU admission and death of Covid-19, researchers say
https://www.cnn.com/2021/03/18/health/aspirin-coronavirus-icu-wellness/index.htmlLow-dose aspirin can reduce the risk of ICU admission and death of Covid-19, researchers say
Ryan Prior
By Ryan Prior, CNN
Updated 11:56 AM ET, Thu March 18, 2021
(CNN)Low-dose aspirin may help protect the lungs and reduce the need to put patients on ventilators, researchers reported Wednesday.
The cheap and widely available pills also keep patients out of ICUs and can reduce the risk of death, probably by preventing tiny blood clots, a team at George Washington University reported in a study published in the journal Anesthesia & Analgesia.
Aspirin is particularly attractive because it is one of the most widely available over-the-counter drugs. Its cost, at just cents per dose, is minuscule compared with other commonly used anti-Covid drugs such as remdesivir, which can run thousands of dollars for a typical treatment course.
Aspirin can help prevent blood clots, which is why people who have had a heart attack are often advised to take a baby aspirin every day.
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"The reason why we started looking at aspirin and Covid is because in the spring we all realized that all these patients started to have a lot of thrombotic complications, or a lot of blood clots that have formed throughout their bodies," Dr. Jonathan Chow, assistant professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine at the George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences, told CNN.
"That is why we thought that using an antiplatelet agent, or a blood thinner, like aspirin, might be helpful in COVID-19," Chow said.
The team looked at the records of 412 patients admitted to several US hospitals between March and July 2020. About 24% of the patients received aspirin within 24 hours of hospital admission, or in the seven days before hospital admission. But most, 76%, did not receive the drug. Aspirin use was associated with a 44% reduction in mechanical ventilation, a 43% reduction in ICU admission, and a 47% reduction for in-hospital mortality, the researchers found.
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Shrek
(4,111 posts)I've been on daily aspirin since November.
abqtommy
(14,118 posts)first heard about it. So far so good!
LetMyPeopleVote
(154,220 posts)Claire Oh Nette
(2,636 posts)I've been on baby aspirin since December 1990, after my first (rare) heart attack when I was 23. I've had two, and I sport an ICD/pacemaker.
I was very afraid of Covid. Even wrote up a will and advanced directive and discussed last spring with my brother and BFF whether to keep me on a ventilator in the event. I took an abundance of precautions, yet still caught the 'vid. Mild.
Still really sick, but never the high, high fever (peaked at 99.8, and I run 97.1 as by baseline). GOt a pulse Oximeter right away, and never dipped below 90%.
I figure type O blood, and now this about the aspirin. I got lucky, very, very lucky.
a baby aspirin a day is probably good medicine for everyone.