This is a meta-study, touching on that "contrast" already: there is a subsection in the paper dedicated to this, where they claim that
"The major factor in cerebral bleeding however is hypertension, and in an RCT of aspirin based on more than 18,000 hypertensive patients—all of whom were receiving ‘optimal’ antihypertensive treatment—there were no additional cerebral bleeds in patients randomised to aspirin" (Refs 46 and 47).
which seems to be in contradiction with the article corresponding to the news you linked to: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle... and strangely doesn't cite or comment on Refs 46 and 47 from the paper of the main thread, possibly because they don't seem to be focusing on older adults.
There is also a subsection on gastrointestinal bleeding.
Intracranial bleeding isn't necessary something that cause permanent damage, or lethal by the way.
This is a meta-study, touching on that "contrast" already: there is a subsection in the paper dedicated to this, where they claim that
"The major factor in cerebral bleeding however is hypertension, and in an RCT of aspirin based on more than 18,000 hypertensive patients—all of whom were receiving ‘optimal’ antihypertensive treatment—there were no additional cerebral bleeds in patients randomised to aspirin" (Refs 46 and 47).
which seems to be in contradiction with the article corresponding to the news you linked to: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle... and strangely doesn't cite or comment on Refs 46 and 47 from the paper of the main thread, possibly because they don't seem to be focusing on older adults.
There is also a subsection on gastrointestinal bleeding.
Intracranial bleeding isn't necessary something that cause permanent damage, or lethal by the way.