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  2. What is Hypertension? Everything You Need to Know - AOL

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    Medications that can raise your blood pressure include antidepressants, birth control pills, decongestants, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), like ibuprofen and aspirin. Race.

  3. Daily low-dose aspirin has its benefits — and risks. Here's ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/aspirin-every-day-why-not...

    Aspirin helps prevent blood clots from forming, which is the leading cause of heart attack and stroke, but the drug also carries a risk of bleeding. That risk can outweigh aspirin’s benefits in ...

  4. 8 Common Cardiovascular Diseases for Men & How to Prevent Them

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    High blood pressure (Learn more about How to Lower Blood Pressure.) High cholesterol. Heart disease. Diabetes. Obesity. Sickle cell disease. ... Low-dose aspirin therapy. Beta-blockers. Nitroglycerin.

  5. Aspirin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspirin

    Aspirin taken at doses of ≤325 mg and ≤100 mg per day for ≥2 days can increase the odds of suffering a gout attack by 81% and 91% respectively. This effect may potentially be worsened by high purine diets, diuretics, and kidney disease, but is eliminated by the urate lowering drug allopurinol. [ 184 ]

  6. Mechanism of action of aspirin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanism_of_action_of_aspirin

    Aspirin is non-selective and irreversibly inhibits both forms [4] (but is weakly more selective for COX-1 [5]). It does so by acetylating the hydroxyl of a serine residue at the 530 amino acid position. [6] Normally COX produces prostaglandins, most of which are pro-inflammatory, and thromboxanes, which promote clotting.

  7. Antihypotensive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antihypotensive

    An antihypotensive, also known as vasopressor, is an agent that raises blood pressure by constricting blood vessels, thereby increasing systemic vascular resistance. This is different from inotropes which increase the force of cardiac contraction. Some substances do both (e.g. dopamine, dobutamine).

  8. 5 supplements a doctor who says he's reversed his age by 20 ...

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    Taking aspirin regularly long-term carries risks because it can thin the blood so that the body can't form clots when bleeding. ... that the supplement didn't increase the amount of CoQ10 in their ...

  9. Systolic hypertension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systolic_hypertension

    In medicine, systolic hypertension is defined as an elevated systolic blood pressure (SBP). [1] If the systolic blood pressure is elevated (>140) with a normal (<90) diastolic blood pressure (DBP), it is called isolated systolic hypertension. [2] Eighty percent of people with systolic hypertension are over the age of 65 years old. [3] Isolated ...