I can answer, but the question is incomplete. “Can aspirin take with …” could mean several different pairings (with food, with another medicine, with alcohol, or with a specific drug name).
What exactly are you trying to take aspirin with? Reply with:
1) the other medication/supplement name (and dose, if you know it), and
2) your aspirin dose (e.g., 81 mg, 325 mg), and
3) whether you’re taking it for pain, fever, or heart prevention.
If you’re asking about common options, here are quick safety checks that often come up:
Aspirin + ibuprofen/other NSAIDs
You generally shouldn’t take aspirin at the same time as ibuprofen or other NSAIDs unless a clinician told you to, because it can interfere with aspirin’s antiplatelet effect (especially for low-dose aspirin).
Aspirin + anticoagulants/antiplatelets (warfarin, apixaban, clopidogrel, etc.)
This combination raises bleeding risk. It may be done in some patients, but only with a prescriber’s guidance.
Aspirin + alcohol
This increases stomach-bleeding risk. Avoid or keep it minimal.
Aspirin + acetaminophen (Tylenol)
This is usually safer for the stomach than mixing aspirin with other NSAIDs, but you still should avoid exceeding acetaminophen’s daily maximum from all sources.
Aspirin + antacids/acid reducers
Some antacids can reduce stomach irritation; acid reducers may help if you have gastritis or ulcers. The exact timing can depend on the product.
Aspirin + supplements (like fish oil, vitamin E, ginkgo)
Some can increase bleeding risk, especially at higher doses.
Reply with the specific thing after “with,” and I’ll give a direct answer for that exact combination.