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I always recommend that my patients take an enteric-coated aspirin.
Aspirin can also upset your stomach, so I suggest taking an enteric-coated form along with food.
The enteric-coated pill has a special coating to protect your stomach.
Thus, even enteric-coated or buffered aspirin may cause gastrointestinal problems.
However, this timing cannot be recommended for enteric-coated aspirin.
Do not crush, chew, or break an enteric-coated pill.
Look for enteric-coated capsules, which are less likely to cause heartburn - and check with your doctor first if you're taking other medications.
An enteric-coated formulation is now marketed as well.
I also suggest taking the enteric-coated aspirin with food (a light snack or meal) to reduce the potential for stomach upset.
For most patients, the multiple-unit pellet system is of no advantage over conventional enteric-coated preparations.
Effect of an enteric-coated fish-oil preparation on relapses in Crohn's disease.
Since you need to take the aspirin regularly, people typically notice less stomach upset or heartburn with the enteric-coated version.
Enteric-coated aspirin is specially formulated to be gentle on your stomach, but you may take it with food or milk if desired.
The filtrate is freeze-dried and the resulting solid enclosed in enteric-coated capsules.
It is available as enteric-coated tablets.
Enteric-coated capsules don't dissolve in the stomach.
Diarrhea: Enteric-coated peppermint oil could cause anal burning, if you have diarrhea.
The contents swell from water absorption causing the shell to burst, releasing the enteric-coated granules.
Use buffered or enteric-coated aspirin.
For women with a risk of heart disease that's higher than normal, a daily tablet of low-strength enteric-coated aspirin is recommended.
Enteric-coated aspirin, platelet cyclooxygenase activity and function.
Swallow enteric-coated tablets whole.
Enteric-coated peppermint-oil capsules in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome: a prospective, randomized trial.
If you still feel the burn, ask your doctor for another type of blood pressure medication or for a slow-release enteric-coated version of potassium.
Failure of enteric-coated peppermint oil in the irritable bowel syndrome: a randomized double-blind crossover study.