Aspirin

Aspirin was a drug used by humans in tablet form to relieve mild pain.

Aspirin and Time Lords
Aspirin is apparently a fatal poison to Time Lords.


 * Jo Grant once offered an unidentified tablet to the Third Doctor, who declined because it was for the wrong metabolism, and it'd probably kill him. (DW: The Mind of Evil)


 * An attempt was made on the Sixth Doctor's life when an alien who knew Time Lord physiology poisoned his tea with soluble aspirin. The Doctor managed to counteract the aspirin by eating chocolate, a source of simple triglycerides which the Doctor's body easily absorbed, and which counteracted the "anti-platelet effect of the aspirin." (BFA: The Condemned)


 * The Seventh Doctor knew "one good dose of aspirin would be enough to kill him." (NA: The Left-Handed Hummingbird)


 * One of the Time Lords from The War's future amused himself by taking powdered aspirin as a snuff, which "would have killed a normal Time Lord in seconds by interfering with hormone receptor intermediaries." (EDA: The Taking of Planet 5)


 * The Eighth Doctor, frustrated by the lack of service he finds in a local government building, claimed he wanted to take an aspirin for the headache he'd gotten from the situation. Given aspirin's poisonous effects on Time Lords, this can be taken as a bit of dark humour on the Doctor's part. (BFA: Caerdroia)

Other Appearances

 * In 1555, Francois de Noailles accused Evelyn Smythe of plotting to use the aspirin she brought with her to poison Queen Mary. (BFA: The Marian Conspiracy)


 * In 1979, Professor Chronotis offered Chris Parsons some aspirin for his headache. (DW: Shada, WC: Shada)


 * By the 25th century, aspirin was no longer used. Barbara Wright got some aspirin from the TARDIS's first aid kit for Vicki's headache. (DW: The Web Planet) Later, the Doctor no longer carried aspirin in his TARDIS. (EDA: The Infinity Race)

Behind the Scenes
The tablet which would have killed the Doctor in The Mind of Evil was not specified to be aspirin. It was assumed to be so, and became fanon, after Kate Orman specified the Doctor's weakness toward aspirin in The Left-Handed Hummingbird.