| Literature DB >> 16276136 |
Iris McNulty1, Eliezer Katz, Karissa Y Kim.
Abstract
A total of 23 patients who developed heparin-induced thrombocytopenia following exposure to heparin solely due to intravascular catheter or filter flush were the subjects of prospective studies of argatroban therapy. Heparin doses were 10-13,000 U, with a mean exposure of 8+/-4 days. Following heparin-induced thrombocytopenia diagnosis and heparin cessation, 13 patients received argatroban (mean dose of 1.8+/-1.1 mg/kg/min for 5.5+/-3.9 days), achieving activated partial thromboplastin times of 63+/-23 seconds, and 10 historical control patients received no direct thrombin inhibitors. Platelet count recovered to a mean of 207+/-153 x 10(9)/L (n=12) after 5.5+/-3.9 days of argatroban therapy and to a mean of 127+/-63 x 10(9)/L (n=8) 5 days after baseline in the control group. A composite end point of death, amputation, or new thrombosis within 37 days occurred in five (38.5%) argatroban-treated patients and four (40%) controls. Death was the most common untoward outcome (approximately 30% of each group). No argatroban-treated patient and two (20%) control patients experienced new thrombosis. Major bleeding was comparable between groups. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia can occur following minimal heparin exposure, including heparin flushes; in these patients, argatroban provides effective alternative anticoagulation as compared with historical controls.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16276136 DOI: 10.1111/j.0889-7204.2005.04693.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Cardiovasc Nurs ISSN: 0889-7204