Anticoagulation and anti-platelet drugs Flashcards

Diseases of the blood

1
Q

What is injectable anticoagulation?

A

Heparins- unfractionated and low molecular weight heparin

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2
Q

How is unfractionated heparin administered and how is low mw heparin administered?

A

Unfractionated heparin-Via infusion only active for a few minutes
Low mw heparin- subcutaneous injection 1x a day

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3
Q

How does unfractionated heparin work and how does low mw heparin work?

A

Unfractionated- allows rapid control, rapid onset and quick end to effect, inhibits antithrombin 3 preventing its action RARELY DENTAL ISSUE
Low mw heparin- stops low level excess clotting without increasing bleeding risk
NO PRACTICAL DENTAL ISSUES

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4
Q

What are the types of oral anticoagulation?

A

Coumarins and non-coumarins

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5
Q

What are dental care procedures you should be cautious with for people taking these drugs?

A

Extractions, minor oral surgery, implants, periodontal surgery and biopsies sometimes

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6
Q

What are some indications for anti coagulation?

A

Conditions where blood clots will form too readily on or in the circulation e.g. atrial fibrillation, DVT, heart valve disease, mechanical heart valves and thrombophilia

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7
Q

Give an example of a factor xa inhibitor and a coumarin.

A

FXA- apixaban
coumarins- warfarin

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8
Q

How is warfarin response measured?

A

International normalised ratio- normal is 2-3 and 3-4 in prosthetic valves and higher risk of DVT

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9
Q

How often should warfarin be checked?

A

Every 4-8 weeks, more often if value is unstable and all patients should carry a recording anti-coag booklet

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10
Q

What can upset the INR?

A

Foods and medicines interacting with warfarin

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11
Q

How do we proceed with dental procedures likely to cause haemorrhage for patients taking warfarin?

A

INR and FBC blood test within 72 hours of treatment, 24 is preferred, early in the day + week, if INR <4 proceed with caution, apply local haemastatic measures and post-op instructions with contact number

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12
Q

Which drugs increase INR when taking warfarin? 4

A

Amiodarone, antibiotics, alcohol w. liver disease and NSAIDs

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13
Q

Which drugs reduce INR when taking warfarin? 5

A

Carbamazepine, barbiturates, cholestyramine, griseofulvin and alcohol w.out liver disease

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14
Q

What medications to avoid giving to those dental patients on warfarin

A

Aspirin for analgesia, NSAIDs, azole antifungal drugs

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15
Q

What are the hazards of taking warfarin?

A

Haemorrhage needing hospitalisation can be fatal, can be from trauma such as hip/bone fracture after a fall, soft tissue injury leading to bleeding in muscles

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16
Q

How do you reverse anticoagulation rapidly in a hospital setting?

A

Vitamin K injections

17
Q

What are NOAC’s?

A

New oral anti-coagulants

18
Q

How do NOACs work?

A

Prevent the effect of Factor X- no need to monitor action, rapid onset within an hour, short duration of action (lost within a day)

19
Q

Give an example of a NOAC

A

Apixaban 2x daily

20
Q

How do we proceed with dental treatment for those with NOAC? Extraction aswell

A

Assess bleeding risk of procedure- treat earlier day, if its a higher risk procedure, miss/delay morning dose and restart dose immediately after treatment for once daily and omit 1st and take 2nd daily dose for twice daily, IDB if needed and local haemostatic measures
Extraction- do at beginning of the day at beginning of the week and keep for atleast 20 min post op to assess bleeding

21
Q

What are dental drug interactions with NOAC?

A

Safe with antifungals, antivirals, and local anaesthetic **