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Aspirin strawberry and raspberry?

See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Aspirin

Are “aspirin strawberry” and “aspirin raspberry” referring to aspirin brands or something in food/flavoring?

Those phrases aren’t standard medical terms for aspirin. They most commonly show up as product names (for example, chewable tablets, flavored tablets/candy-style packaging, or supplements) that use “strawberry” or “raspberry” as the flavor.

If you can share a bit more—like the exact label text, manufacturer, or a photo of the front/back of the package—I can tell you what it is (and whether it’s actually aspirin or something else).

What ingredients should you check on a “flavored aspirin” product label?

For anything marketed as aspirin (especially in strawberry/raspberry flavors), check:
- Active ingredient: “Aspirin” (or acetylsalicylic acid)
- Strength per tablet (mg)
- Any additional actives (sometimes products also include other pain/fever ingredients)
- Inactive ingredients and allergens (important for fruit-flavored items)
- Whether it’s intended for children or adults (use instructions carefully)

Is there any safety issue with aspirin taken with fruit flavors?

Flavor itself usually doesn’t change aspirin’s safety profile, but aspirin can still cause issues regardless of flavor:
- Stomach irritation/heartburn, nausea
- Bleeding risk (especially at higher doses or with blood thinners)
- Allergy/asthma reactions in some people

Can “raspberry” or “strawberry” products actually be aspirin-free?

Yes. Many consumer items use fruit terms for branding (or for cough drops/chews) and are not true aspirin products. That’s why the active-ingredient line on the package matters most.

Where to look if you’re trying to identify the product accurately

  • The Drug “Supplement Facts” / “Drug Facts” panel on the exact box or bottle
  • The imprint code on tablets (if present)
  • The manufacturer name and strength (mg)

    If you paste the “Drug Facts” active ingredient section (or the strength and manufacturer), I’ll interpret it and tell you what “aspirin strawberry/raspberry” likely refers to and how it differs from plain aspirin.


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