I take a baby aspirin daily, and an MD told me my hematomas are caused by aspirin.
Anyone else have an opinion?
They occur randomly, it seems, and only on the the back of my hand in the fleshy portion between the forefinger and thumb. These hematomas stay for a few days and then disappear.
I have no other symptoms and am not alarmed, just curious.
So, I’ll kick the aspirin and will bring the matter up with my GP the next time I see him.
On another subject…
I have tinnitus that comes and goes.
A few months back when I was taking piano lessons, I began to notice that even just after, say, a half hour of practice (or maybe even much sooner), my ears would start to ring. So I quit the piano.
If I went back (and to hell with the tinnitus), would I risk further damage? (I tried wearing ear plugs, for awhile but it seemed oxymoronic, somehow. :D)
Again, I would never construe what you recommended for a patient of yours as specific advice for me.
The test used is the platelet function closure time which replaced the old “bleeding time” test, and which frankly I’ve rarely ordered. It will be abnormal in someone on aspirin, so if one wants to see if there’s anything beyond aspirin-related coag problems, one needs to go off aspirin (for a few weeks at least) before having the test done. It’s not that helpful.
I put lots of people on aspirin. Diabetics, hypertensives, folks with significantly elevated cholesterol. In short, those folks who are at high risk for heart disease.