Disprin Tablets Disprin Soluble Tablets for fast and effective pain relief. Disprin Soluble Tablet for fast relief of: Headache Migraine Toothache Period pain For relief of the symptoms of: Cold, flu, sore throat Rheumatic pain Lumbago Sciatica and neuralgia Contains Aspirin Direction: Dissolve the tablets in water before taking. Dosage: Adults 2-3 tablets every 4 hours. Do exceed 13 tablets in 24 hours Do not give to children aged under 16 years If the symptoms persist, consult your doctor Do not take if: You have or have had a stomach ulcer or haemophilia. Each tablet contains: Aspirin Ph Eur 300 mg Also contains: Calcium carbonate, maize starch, citric acid anhydrous, talc, sodium lauryl sulphate, saccharin, crospovidone and lime flavour. Warnings and interactions: Consult your doctor before taking if: You are asthmatic, allergic to aspirin, receiving regular medical treatment, such as medicines for blood clots or gout, or are pregnant or breastfeeding. Side Effects: In people sensitive to aspirin, reactions such as asthma attack and skin rashes may occur occasionally. Use may also induce gastrointestinal haemorrhage (vomiting of blood or passing tarry stools), occasionally major. Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you have any side effects after taking this product. Do not give to children aged under 16 years, unless on the advice of a doctor. Contains aspirin. There is a possible association between aspirin and Reyes Syndrome when given to children. Reyes Syndrome is a very rare disease, which can be fatal. For this reason aspirin should not be given to children aged under 16 years, unless on the advice of a doctor.
Disprin Aspirin Soluble Tablets provide relief of mild to moderate pain in headaches including migraine headaches, toothache, neuralgia, sciatica, period pains, sore throats, symptomatic relief of feverishness, influenza, colds, rheumatism lumbago. Published in the Daily Mail December 7 2010: Taking an aspirin every day cuts the risk of dying from a range of common cancers, according to a major study. The study has led to the 100-year-old painkiller - costing just 1p a tablet - being hailed as 'the most amazing drug in the world'. Experts say healthy middle-aged people who start taking low-dose aspirin around the age of 45 or 50 for 20 to 30 years could expect to reap the most benefit, because cancer rates rise with age. In addition, a 75mg dose - a quarter of a standard 300mg tablet - helps prevent heart attacks and strokes even in people who have not been diagnosed with cardiovascular problems. Millions of heart patients who already take low-dose aspirin on doctors' orders to ward off a second heart attack or stroke will be getting built-in cancer protection. Professor Peter Rothwell, of the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, who headed the latest study of almost 26, 000 patients, is convinced the ground rules have changed. He said: 'These findings provide the first proof in man that aspirin reduces deaths due to several common cancers'. 'Previous guidelines have rightly cautioned that in healthy middle-aged people the small risk of bleeding on aspirin partly offsets the benefits from prevention of strokes and heart attacks, but the reductions in deaths due to several common cancers will now alter this balance for many people.' After five years of taking aspirin, death rates fell by 34 per cent for all cancers and 54 per cent for gastrointestinal cancers. Professor Alastair Watson, of the University of East Anglia, said: 'This study provides strong evidence that taking regular aspirin for more than five years can help prevent development of a number of other forms of cancer, including lung, pancreas, oesophageal and prostate cancers'. 'It also indicates that the longer aspirin is taken for, the greater the benefit. It is important that people know aspirin can cause dangerous bleeding in the stomach in some patients. People wishing to take aspirin should first discuss it with their GP.' Always check with your GP before taking aspirin
Disprin Direct Chewable Aspirin don't need to be taken with water, so they can be taken anywhere. They are absorbed quickly to bring rapid, effective, temporary relief from pain associated with: Headaches & migraines Rheumatic & arthritic pain Sciatica & Neuralgia (Nerve Pain) Toothaches Cold & Flu symptoms Sore throats Period pain Lumbago Relieves inflammation associated with back and muscular pain, strains and sprains Reduces fever Published in the Daily Mail December 7 2010: Taking an aspirin every day cuts the risk of dying from a range of common cancers, according to a major study. The study has led to the 100-year-old painkiller - costing just 1p a tablet - being hailed as 'the most amazing drug in the world'. Experts say healthy middle-aged people who start taking low-dose aspirin around the age of 45 or 50 for 20 to 30 years could expect to reap the most benefit, because cancer rates rise with age. In addition, a 75mg dose - a quarter of a standard 300mg tablet - helps prevent heart attacks and strokes even in people who have not been diagnosed with cardiovascular problems. Millions of heart patients who already take low-dose aspirin on doctors' orders to ward off a second heart attack or stroke will be getting built-in cancer protection. Professor Peter Rothwell, of the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, who headed the latest study of almost 26, 000 patients, is convinced the ground rules have changed. He said: 'These findings provide the first proof in man that aspirin reduces deaths due to several common cancers'. 'Previous guidelines have rightly cautioned that in healthy middle-aged people the small risk of bleeding on aspirin partly offsets the benefits from prevention of strokes and heart attacks, but the reductions in deaths due to several common cancers will now alter this balance for many people.' After five years of taking aspirin, death rates fell by 34 per cent for all cancers and 54 per cent for gastrointestinal cancers. Professor Alastair Watson, of the University of East Anglia, said: 'This study provides strong evidence that taking regular aspirin for more than five years can help prevent development of a number of other forms of cancer, including lung, pancreas, oesophageal and prostate cancers.' 'It also indicates that the longer aspirin is taken for, the greater the benefit. It is important that people know aspirin can cause dangerous bleeding in the stomach in some patients. People wishing to take aspirin should first discuss it with their GP.' Always check with your GP before taking aspirin