Abstract
The most important adverse effect of antithrombotic treatment is the occurrence of bleeding. in case of serious or even life-threatening bleeding in a patient who uses anticoagulant agents or when patient on anticoagulants needs to undergo an urgent invasive procedure, anticoagulant treatment can be reversed by various specific strategies. heparin and heparin derivatives can be counteracted by protamine sulphate, whereas the anticoagulant effect of vitamin K antagonists may be neutralised by administration of vitamin K or prothrombin complex concentrates. the antihaemostatic effect of aspirin and other antiplatelet strategies can be corrected by the administration of platelet concentrate and/or desmopressin, if needed. recently, a new generation of anticoagulants with a greater specificity towards activated coagulation factors has been introduced and most of these agents are currently being evaluated in clinical studies, showing promising results. the new-generation anticoagulants include specific inhibitors of factor iia or factor Xa (including pentasaccharides) and antiplatelet agents belonging to the class of thienopyridine derivatives. a limitation of the new class of anti-iia and anti-Xa agents may be the lack of an appropriate strategy to reverse the effect if a bleeding event occurs, although in some cases the administration of recombinant factor VIIa may be an option. © Van Zuiden Communications B.V. All rights reserved.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 68-76 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | Netherlands Journal of Medicine |
| Volume | 68 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| Publication status | Published - 1-Feb-2010 |
Keywords
- Anticoagulants
- Aspirin
- Cangrelor
- Clopidogrel
- Haemorrhage
- Heparin
- Pentasaccharides
- Prasugrel
- Vitamin K antagonists
- acenocoumarol
- acetylsalicylic acid
- anticoagulant agent
- antithrombin
- antithrombocytic agent
- apixaban
- blood clotting factor 10a inhibitor
- clopidogrel
- dabigatran
- desmopressin
- enoxaparin
- fondaparinux
- heparanase
- heparin
- hirudin
- idraparinux
- low molecular weight heparin
- melagatran
- nonsteroid antiinflammatory agent
- phenprocoumon
- prasugrel
- protamine sulfate
- prothrombin
- prothrombin complex
- recombinant blood clotting factor 7a
- rivaroxaban
- thrombocyte factor 4
- unindexed drug
- vitamin K group
- warfarin
- acute coronary syndrome
- allergic reaction
- anticoagulation
- bleeding
- brain hemorrhage
- cardiovascular disease
- case control study
- cerebrovascular accident
- comorbidity
- coronary artery bypass graft
- coronary artery disease
- disease transmission
- disseminated intravascular clotting
- dose response
- drug absorption
- drug binding
- drug bioavailability
- drug effect
- drug half life
- drug megadose
- drug metabolism
- drug potentiation
- drug screening
- gastrointestinal hemorrhage
- genetic variability
- geriatric patient
- heart atrium fibrillation
- heart death
- heart infarction
- hemodynamics
- hemostasis
- heredity
- high risk patient
- human
- incidence
- international normalized ratio
- kidney failure
- liver failure
- nanofiltration
- occlusive cerebrovascular disease
- orthopedic surgery
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- prothrombin time
- respiratory tract disease
- review
- risk benefit analysis
- risk factor
- side effect
- single nucleotide polymorphism
- ST segment elevation
- thrombin time
- thrombosis prevention
- treatment indication
- vasectomy
- venous thromboembolism