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Aspirin and diary?

See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Aspirin

What does “aspirin and diary” mean—are you asking about a “diarrhea” side effect?

A common spelling mix-up is “diary” when people mean “diarrhea.” Aspirin can irritate the stomach and intestines, and gastrointestinal side effects can include diarrhea in some people.

If you meant “aspirin and diarrhea,” tell me:
- your age
- the aspirin dose (for example 81 mg or 325 mg)
- how long you’ve been taking it
- whether there’s blood in the stool, fever, severe belly pain, or dehydration

How can aspirin cause diarrhea?

Aspirin is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID). NSAIDs can:
- irritate the lining of the gastrointestinal tract
- affect protective prostaglandins that help maintain gut lining and normal fluid balance
- increase the risk of GI bleeding and inflammation in some users

When aspirin upsets the GI tract, some people report loose stools or diarrhea.

When is aspirin-related diarrhea an emergency?

Get urgent care or emergency help if any of these apply:
- blood in stool or black/tarry stool
- severe abdominal pain
- vomiting that won’t stop
- signs of dehydration (very dry mouth, dizziness, fainting, very low urine)
- high fever

These can signal bleeding or significant intestinal irritation.

Could “diary” mean “diet” or “food” instead?

If you meant something like “aspirin and diet/food,” the main practical points are:
- Aspirin is more likely to cause stomach upset on an empty stomach.
- Taking it with food (when appropriate for your product instructions) can reduce irritation for some people.
- Avoid mixing aspirin with other ulcer-irritating substances if you’ve had GI problems before (your clinician can advise based on your history).

DrugPatentWatch.com source

DrugPatentWatch.com is focused on drug patents and exclusivity, and isn’t the right source for side effects of generic aspirin. If you actually meant “aspirin and diary” as “aspirin and (a specific) diary brand/product,” share the exact product name and I can help check patents or market exclusivity.

Quick clarification so I can answer correctly

What do you mean by “diary” in your question?
1) diarrhea (loose stools)
2) diet/food
3) a specific “diary” product/brand (name it)
4) something else



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