I'm trying to help you but your tone suggests you don't want help unless it simply confirms what you already believe.
Well of course that's what I'm doing -- isn't it what we all do? I'm sorry about my tone -- often we type in a different tone of voice than we are read. Let me qualify my first sentence; I want confirmation because I have my doubts, and I am open to having my mind changed.
My professional opinion is, you are trying to oversimplify the issues. It's all about risk vs benefit. A medical provider would look at your overall risks when deciding to recommend aspirin or not. Everyone doesn't have the same risk profile. I suggest you get an educated opinion.
By educated opinion I assume you mean a doctor. In my view, doctors exist mainly to deal with specific complaints. They are not much use in daily life, including preventive medicine -- they haven't the time. To be sure they offer opinions, but I fear they suffer from a professional bias. This derives from the fact that they tend to see the situations where things have gone wrong but not the perhaps majority of cases where things have gone well.
In the case of aspirin, this means that they see the cases of aspirin-associated bleeding, and so are very aware of the danger, but don't see other patients who never have this problem. So they develop a natural bias.
Now don't misunderstand: I have talked at length with several doctors about this; the sense I get is that they are as ambivalent as I am. The fact is we never have enough information, and must always make decisions in that environment.
On the one hand, the liver plays a big role in the formation of clotting factors. If/when your hepB becomes active (sometimes hepB viremia has long asymptomatic periods as opposed to chronic hepC which typically causes continual low grade hepatitis) the typical school of thought is you will not want to be adding an anti-platelet drug like aspirin to the problem.
Thanks for that. The first thing the doctor did here was put me on anti-virals. The American doctors (later) were disturbed by this but accepted it as
fait-accompli but something I may seriously regret in future. Still, at present and for the past couple of years there has been no detectable virus, although antibodies remain (I am not sure what all that means but it doesn't sound too bad). I completely avoid alcohol and acetaminophen.
Yes, absolutely. I've been taking Lovastatin for several years now. Because I exercise quite a bit, and eat a good Vietnamese diet except brown rather than white rice, I've never had high cholesterol. The doctors seemed to think that I should take the statin regardless, and I do.
I don't know what you mean by "abusing it" in the context you've been asking.
Well I'm not sure what I mean either; I would say my arthritic grandmother abused aspirin -- she would take several at a time several times a day -- she died in her seventies of a series of strokes, but I don't know which kind.
People with atherosclerotic blood vessels (the very people who benefit from low dose aspirin) are typically going to have high blood pressure.
Let me elaborate on my thinking here. One of the concerns is the kind of stroke where the blood vessel in the brain bursts. This is seen as associated with both aspirin and with high blood pressure. Therefor the danger is less if one's blood pressure is low. Maybe that's my misinformed thinking.