The difference between Panax ginseng powder and aspirin is the difference in dosage form, ingredients, and effects.
Panax ginseng powder is the powder made from the Chinese medicine Panax ginseng. Panax pseudoginseng is the dried root of Panax pseudoginseng, a plant of the family Wujiaceae. The medicine tastes sweet, slightly bitter, warm in nature, and is attributed to the liver and stomach meridians. It has the effects of dispersing blood stasis and stopping bleeding (removing stasis and stopping bleeding), and subduing swelling and resolving pain (eliminating swelling and pain).
Panax ginseng is mainly used in the treatment of hemoptysis, vomiting, epistaxis, hematemesis, metrorrhagia (excessive menstrual flow or dribbling), bleeding from traumatic injuries, stabbing pain in the chest and abdomen, and swelling and pain from bruises. Use with caution in pregnant women.
Aspirin is a western medicine, commonly used in the form of tablets, capsules, bulk, as antipyretic and analgesic, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, anti-platelet aggregation drugs. It has the effect of relieving pain and inhibiting thrombosis. The more common adverse reactions to this product are nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain and discomfort, ulcers, bleeding, and allergic reactions.
Aspirin is contraindicated in patients with known hypersensitivity to the product and in patients who have induced asthma, urticaria, or anaphylactic reactions after taking this drug. It is contraindicated in the treatment of perioperative pain in coronary artery bypass graft surgery. Contraindicated in patients with severe heart failure, hemophilia or thrombocytopenia, infants under three months of age, patients with active peptic ulcers or bleeding, and patients who have had recurrent ulcers or bleeding in the past.
If you need to use the drug, you need to use it under the guidance of a doctor, do not use the drug on your own to avoid adverse effects on the body.