Thursday, September 23, 2010

Does Ibuprofen (NSAID's) own blood thinning properties?

Yes. Ibuprofen such as Advil and Motrin, do present properties that are analgesic, antipyretic, mild anti-inflammatory, and an anticoagulant effect. The anticoagulant effect of NSAID's is less than that of Aspirin.
yes, but it is amazingly mild.
no, only asprin
It have a mild anti-coagulant propertie
Depends on the brand and then it's watery. 81mg (one tab) of aspirin per day is appropriate.
All NSAID's (non-steroiodal antiinflamatory drugs) have some blood thining properties but zilch like aspirin wich combines beside the platelets irreversibly and makes them slippery cause longer coagulation time (or higher INR) if you choice. Some evidence points that ibuprofen stops this effect of aspirin. So patients taking aspirin as a "blood thinner" are better off not taking ibuprofen. Ibuprofen is never prescribed as an antiplatelet, singular aspirin is.
Yes, it has.
Acetaminophen does not and is roughly a very accurate drug for pain nouns or to fight hallucination. It is given over the counter, too, and it has much smaller number side effects than ibuprophen or aspirin
No such incedents have be reported with Ibuprofen use compared to Aspirin..
yes..but it does not "thin" the blood. it make the clotting time of the blood longer. no thinning involved.
Ibuprofen has no clinically significant effect on coagulation because it is pro tem. Aspirin is the only NSAID that have a useful thinning because it is unwavering.
Yes, it dose. You will need to stop the drug prior to surgery to prevent non-stop bleeding, if you're taking it on a regular foundation.
Please see the webpages for more details on Ibuprofen.

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