I was recently surprised to read an article by Dr. Joseph Mercola who was singing the praises of acetylsalicylic acid, also known as aspirin. It was surprising because Dr. Mercola is widely known for endorsing natural approaches to health, rather than drugs. Yet in the article he supports the practice of regularly swallowing aspirin, something that I have repeatedly warned against.
Here in his own words is what Mercola claims:
However, his article fails to convince me about the accuracy of any of these claims and he appears to dismiss the dark side of aspirin.
In May 2014, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advised against the use of aspirin to prevent heart attacks or strokes in people with no history of these diseases. This is because there was no evidence proving any benefit. There is still no evidence to this day.
Despite this FDA proclamation, I continued to see many healthy patients in my private practice swallowing daily aspirin tablets on the recommendation of either their family doctors or specialist. Yet the only thing it appears to have done for healthy people was to give them false hope.
At best, aspirin provides a good placebo effect or a benefit in terms of some blood loss for those with high ferritin (iron) levels. Aspirin promotes bleeding from the gastrointestinal tract. Another way of looking at recommending aspirin to healthy people is to see it as a religion without scientific evidence that backs it up.
The FDA made a point of saying that the use of aspirin exposes the public to serious risks of bleeding in the stomach and brain. While the blood thinning benefits of aspirin in people who have already had heart attacks is not being questioned here, the evidence that it can prevent a first heart attack has not been forthcoming. The bottom line is that there is no proof that healthy people need to take a daily aspirin tablet to prevent disease.
Aspirin generated $1.27 billion in sales for Bayer in 2013, which in my opinion was money poorly spent.
Media hype and doctor recommendations are responsible for the over 50 million people in North America taking aspirin regularly. Fear of disease appears to be the main driving force behind this. Hardly a day goes by that someone doesn’t ask me whether they should be taking aspirin daily.
Aside from its widely recognized use as an analgesic and anti-inflammatory agent, aspirin has become increasingly popular with the medical profession for a growing list of other maladies.
Despite a lack of evidence, the American Heart Association recommends aspirin for prevention and treatment of heart disease and stroke, while the American College of Chest Physicians recommends it for any of the risk factors for coronary artery disease including obesity, diabetes, elevated LDL-cholesterol, high blood pressure, smoking, and a family history of heart disease.
Proponents of daily aspirin use offer false hope for both the prevention and treatment of obesity, heart disease, stroke, cancer, tension headaches, arthritis, and seemingly every human discomfort. Yet according to the FDA, the science to support any of these claims is simply not there.
“Each year, use of NSAIDs (Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs) accounts for an estimated 7,600 deaths and 76,000 hospitalizations in the U.S.” (NSAIDs include aspirin, ibuprofen, naproxen, diclofenac, ketoprofen, tiaprofenic acid.)”
https://www.drugwarfacts.org/cms/causes_of_death#sthash.stODmZsT.dpuf
Aspirin side effects include the following:
In addition, aspirin has other unwelcome side effects:
There is a mortality rate of 2% in cases of acute aspirin overdose. Chronic overdose carries a 25% death rate. Signs and symptoms may range from mild nausea and vomiting, abdominal pain, lethargy, ringing in the ears, dizziness, seizure, to cerebral edema depending on the dose consumed.
Treatments for aspirin toxicity include activated charcoal, intravenous dextrose and normal saline, sodium bicarbonate, and dialysis.
A chemist walks into a pharmacy and asks the pharmacist, “Do you have any acetylsalicylic acid?” The pharmacist asks, “Do you mean aspirin?” The chemist replies, “That’s it, I can never remember that word.”
Aspirin prevents blood-clotting factors called platelets from sticking to each other. It does so by blocking a platelet enzyme called cyclooxygenase. Aspirin, by inhibiting cyclooxygenase, can decrease the production of lipid peroxides (free radicals) and thromboxane, a powerful vasoconstrictor. This enzyme inhibition lasts for the lifetime of the platelet, which is approximately 10 days.
Aspirin suppresses the activity of pro-inflammatory chemicals in the body known as the PGE2 family of prostaglandins. It thus indirectly increases the activity of anti-inflammatory prostaglandins of the PGE1 family.
There are some researchers and clinicians who have been able to demonstrate a direct link between the presence of fungi in the body and cardiovascular disease of all kinds. This is known as the “fungal mycotoxin etiology of atherosclerosis” and has been promoted by Dr. Costantini and other researchers working for the World Health Organization. According to these doctors, aspirin is an antifungal drug, which can go a long way towards offsetting the negative effects of fungi and their mycotoxins.
They believe that the antifungal property of aspirin is what prevents heart disease, stroke and cancer – diseases all suspected to have a fungal mycotoxin etiology. Dandruff, a scalp condition caused by fungi, often responds well to shampoos containing aspirin or salicylate derivatives.
1) GLA (GAMMA LINOLENIC ACID) found in plants like borage, black currant seed, and evening primrose has been shown to increase activity of the PGE1 family, producing an anti-inflammatory effect similar to aspirin. Flaxseed oil does not contain GLA, but is rich in linoleic acid which can be converted to GLA in the body to produce these same anti-inflammatory effects. GLA has been documented to lower serum cholesterol, reverse some cases of obesity, clear eczema, lower blood pressure, control allergies, improve autoimmune disease, and prevent arthritis.
2) VITAMIN E (mixed tocopherols) in high doses retards blood clotting. Caution should be exercised if one is using both aspirin and vitamin E (or blood thinners like coumadin with vitamin E) because the combinations have a synergistic effect. Studies indicate that supplementation of as little as 200 IU of vitamin E daily in men can reduce the risk of a heart attack by 46%; in women the risk reduction is 26%. Whether natural source or synthetic source, all forms supply the body with at least some vitamin E activity. The natural forms of vitamin E are d-alpha-tocopherol, d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate, d-alpha-tocopheryl succinate, and mixed tocopherols. The synthetic forms are dl-alpha-tocopherol, dl-alpha-tocopheryl acetate, or dl-alpha-tocopheryl succinate.
Studies indicate that the most biologically active are the esterified natural forms – d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate and d-alpha-tocopheryl succinate. Both have been found to provide full antioxidant activity in the body and are the ones recommended by the top authorities on vitamin E at the Shute Institute and Medical Clinic in London, Ontario.
Recent studies indicate that excessively high levels of stored iron in the body (ferritin) are associated with a greater risk of heart disease and diabetes. High dose vitamin E supplements can interfere with iron absorption. If you have been prescribed iron to correct iron deficiency, take your iron supplement about 12 hours apart from vitamin E. Iron absorption is enhanced by sufficient acid in the stomach. Iron destroys vitamin E in the body.
3) GARLIC is probably the best-known herb that lowers cholesterol (by up to 10%) and triglycerides (by up to 13%) while raising “good” HDL-cholesterol (by up to 31%). Garlic prevents thrombus formation and lowers blood pressure. It prevents platelet stickiness and has natural anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, and anti-parasitic properties. Onions also have these effects but are not as strong as garlic. A 2006 study from the Journal of Nutrition showed that aged garlic is also able to retard the progression of coronary artery calcification, which can lead to arterial blockages.
4) NATTOKINASE is an enzyme isolated from natto, a traditional Japanese food eaten for millennia, made from fermented soybeans. Japanese folklore medicine has traditionally used it for improving cardiovascular health. Studies show that, taken orally, nattokinase can break down and dissolve fibrinogen, a component of blood clots and plaques in the arteries (atherosclerosis). Nattokinase increases the body’s production of plasmin and other thrombolytic enzymes such as urokinase. It improves blood viscosity and circulation in general. Regular use of nattokinase can lower high systolic and high diastolic blood pressure. It also helps optimize blood cholesterol. The usual effective dose is 100 mg twice daily on an empty stomach.
Since all the side effects of the Covid vaccines have been blamed by numerous physicians as being caused by the vaccine-generated spike protein, Dr. Peter McCullough has endorsed nattokinase for what is called “spike detox.” Side effects are extremely rare but may include gastrointestinal discomfort and there have been no reports of bleeding from anywhere in the body.
5) OMEGA-3-EPA oils reduce platelet stickiness. Good dietary sources include flaxseed oil, rice bran oil, trout, mackerel, salmon, herring, sardines, cod, halibut, and shark. With fish consumption there are mercury toxicity issues, especially with larger fish like tuna and sea bass. If you want to get omega-3 without the mercury, you will want to use a supplement because, by law, any omega-3 sold in Canada must be mercury-free. Dr. Jonathan Wright recommends a combination of nattokinase with omega-3 as the best alternative to prescription anticoagulants.
6) POLICOSANOL –this extract made from the wax of sugar cane can lower LDL cholesterol while increasing good HDL cholesterol. Policasanol reduces inflammation and inhibits abnormal platelet aggregation, which promotes arterial blood clotting.
7) GINKGO BILOBA extract from the oldest surviving tree species on earth (dating back over 300 million years) contains flavonoids and terpenoids, which inhibit or prevent blood clot formation. Ginkgo also has potent antioxidant properties and may benefit numerous circulatory problems, including those associated with impotence.
8) BROMELAIN is a proteolytic enzyme (helps digest protein) which is not only anti-inflammatory in its effects but prevents excessive coagulation of the blood by clearing undigested fibrin and other harmful proteins out of the bloodstream.
9) SERRAPEPTASE is an enzyme derived from the silkworm which appears to be one of the most potent and effective of all the anti-inflammatory enzymes. In high enough doses, serrapeptase is capable of dissolving atherosclerotic plaque. See more at: https://vitalitymagazine.com/article/reversing-chronic-inflammation
10) CURCUMIN (extract of turmeric) is a very powerful anti-inflammatory and analgesic agent that is well documented to provide aspirin-like effects without any of the side effects. An effective anti-inflammatory dose of curcumin for most conditions is 1000 mg, three times daily with food. See more at: https://vitalitymagazine.com/article/natural-alternatives-to-cortisone
Caveat: If a person continues to eat a lot of sugar, processed foods, saturated fat (e.g. red meat, fried foods, dairy products, etc.), and if one does not exercise, smokes cigarettes, and drinks alcohol to excess, neither aspirin nor any of the aforementioned alternatives can be guaranteed to do much good. Exercise releases endorphins – powerful chemicals made by the body that reduce inflammation and subsequent pain.
Many of these nutrients are sold in combination form at health food stores. A naturopath or medical doctor familiar with these remedies can recommend specific dosages. The world’s leading medical journals are increasingly reporting that diet and lifestyle changes by themselves can reverse hardening of the arteries and its complications.
Natural aspirin alternatives are hundreds of times safer. Discuss this issue with your health care practitioner and use his or her experience and expertise to guide you with an individualized health program.
Note: This article is not intended to replace the advice of your physician. For any changes to your healthcare regimen, please consult a qualified health professional.
REFERENCES
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