Author Topic: Aspirin sounds like a steroid and cures cancer  (Read 1892 times)

Marty Champions

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Aspirin sounds like a steroid and cures cancer
« on: April 24, 2009, 11:42:06 AM »
While aspirin does not affect performance, it may affect your health. There is still the concern that taking aspirin will inhibit clotting, and if you are hit during exercise, you may bleed and not be able to stop the bleeding. The analgesic effect of aspirin may block pain that tell you to stop exercising. Then you may continue to exercise when you should stop and you can turn a minor injury into a major one. So, take the day off from exercise when your muscles feel sore. Taking aspiring to allow you to exercise can cause an injury.



i disagree with whats in red, there must be a full proof way to exercise by disabiling soreness
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Marty Champions

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Re: Aspirin sounds like a steroid
« Reply #1 on: April 24, 2009, 11:44:40 AM »
Aspirin lowers fever at rest by increasing sweating, so doctors thought that taking aspirin would make you sweat more, dehydrate you and tire you earlier. However, the data do not show that aspirin increases sweating at exercise. Aspirin has been shown to increase oxygen requirements at rest, but several recent studies show that 3 adult aspirin do not increase oxygen requirements during exercise.


http://www.drmirkin.com/archive/6385.html


By studying the eating patterns of 312 women with breast cancer and 316 who were cancer free, Kala Visvanathan, M.B.B.S., of Johns Hopkins University and colleagues found that women who eat flame-broiled foods more that twice a month may be at increased risk of breast cancer, compared to women who don't usually eat foods prepared that way.

The good news, however, is that taking aspirin cancelled out the potentially harmful effects.

"We are not certain of the mechanism by which aspirin may be helping attenuate these risks. This is an area that further study should elucidate as we search for means to reduce the risk of breast cancer," said Visvanathan.
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