Foreigner
Bluelighter
I'm interested in taking aspirin as a longevity supplement but I need to consider this carefully. First of all, I want to find pure powdered aspirin, and not take the OTC stuff with fillers in it. But also, I am concerned about my GI. It's common advice from doctors that people with GI inflammation should avoid NSAIDs, but after looking at the studies those claims are based on, they all involve giving rodents 40-50x the equivalent human dose. Some people in my IBD community have even said that it helps their inflammation. So I am keen to experiment, just a little.
What I really want to know is, what is the big difference between aspirin and salicylic acid? As far as I can tell, it's just an acetyl group? Does this make it more shelf stable, or something? Feel free to explain this biochemically if you have the know-how.
The reason why I want to know is because salicylic acid is much more easy to find than pure aspirin. Some user reports online say that saicylic acid is more likely to cause GI problems and is therefore more appropriate to topical use, but it all seems so anecdotal. Another aspect is that aspirin apparently shows more COX-2 activity, which is more aligned with what I would want it for. But salicylic acid is so readily available and cheap, I am so tempted.
Thoughts? TIA
What I really want to know is, what is the big difference between aspirin and salicylic acid? As far as I can tell, it's just an acetyl group? Does this make it more shelf stable, or something? Feel free to explain this biochemically if you have the know-how.
The reason why I want to know is because salicylic acid is much more easy to find than pure aspirin. Some user reports online say that saicylic acid is more likely to cause GI problems and is therefore more appropriate to topical use, but it all seems so anecdotal. Another aspect is that aspirin apparently shows more COX-2 activity, which is more aligned with what I would want it for. But salicylic acid is so readily available and cheap, I am so tempted.
Thoughts? TIA