Search results for "Thromboembolism."
showing 10 items of 191 documents
Evaluation of VTE-BLEED for predicting intracranial or fatal bleeding in stable anticoagulated patients with venous thromboembolism.
2018
VTE-BLEED predicts fatal and/or intracranial bleeding in patients with venous thromboembolism treated with long-term anticoagulants http://ow.ly/3hqg30iXK5a
A review of venous thromboembolism in COVID‐19: A clinical perspective
2021
Abstract Coronavirus disease‐19 (COVID‐19) started in Wuhan, China in December 2019 and spread to all around the world in a short period of time. Hospitalized patients with COVID‐19 mostly could suffer from an abnormal coagulation activation risk with increased venous thrombosis events and a poor clinical course. The reported incidence rates of thrombotic complications in hospitalized COVID‐19 patients vary between 2.6 and 85% (both in non‐critically ill and critically ill patients). The risk of venous thromboembolism is not known in non‐hospitalized patients with COVID‐19. There are numerous studies and guidelines for administration of thromboprophylaxis for COVID‐19 cases. All hospitalize…
Chronic thromboembolic disease following pulmonary embolism: more work ahead
2020
Optimal management of hormonal contraceptives after an episode of venous thromboembolism
2019
Optimal management of hormonal contraception in patients with venous thromboembolism (VE) requires an individualized approach considering its potential benefits and complications during and after anticoagulant treatment. Potential benefits include prevention of pregnancy and mitigation of menstrual bleeding that is often worsened after start of anticoagulation therapy. Current evidence suggests that patients may opt for a continuation of (all forms of) hormonal contraception during anticoagulant treatment, provided that they are adequately informed by the treating physicians. Combined oral contraceptives should be stopped before anticoagulant therapy may he discontinued, preferably after th…
Neue orale Antikoagulanzien zur Therapie der venösen Thromboembolie
2011
In the current treatment of venous thromboembolism most patients are treated with vitamin K antagonists (VKA). VKA have many disadvantages including slow onset of action, multiple food and drug interactions and a large inter-individual variability in their efficacy. Recently several alternative oral anticoagulants have been developed, which have several advantages in comparison to VKA. So far two large randomized studies comparing new oral anticoagulants with VKA in patients with venous thromboembolism have been published: the RECOVER study with the oral direct thrombin antagonist dabigatran and the EINSTEIN-DVT study with the oral direct factor Xa-antagonist rivaroxaban. With regard to rec…
Verlängerte Sekundärprophylaxe nach venöser Thromboembolie
2018
Was ist neu? Aktuelle Studien Kurz nach Absetzen der oralen Antikoagulation kommt es zu einem etwa 2- bis 3-fachen Anstieg von VTE-Rezidiven. Das Rezidivrisiko ist besonders hoch nach einer VTE, die ohne identifizierbaren Auslöser aufgetreten war oder wenn nur weiche, unsichere auslösende Risikofaktoren vorlagen, sowie bei fortbestehenden Risikofaktoren, wie z. B. einer Krebserkrankung. Konsensusdokument über auslösende Risikofaktoren für venöse Thromboembolie In einem aktuellen Konsensusdokument wurden die zugrundeliegenden Risikofaktoren definiert und in 3 Gruppen klassifiziert. Direkte orale Antikoagulanzien Eine reduzierte Dosis von DOAK ermöglicht eine wirksame verlängerte Sekundärprop…
The risk for cardiovascular disease in women: from estrogens to selective estrogen receptor modulators.
2006
Cardiovascular disease, a generic denomination including coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, and venous thromboembolic disease (VTED), has shown sensitivity to estrogens. The relative protection of women as compared with men has nourished a debate about a possible protective role for estrogens, but the prejudicial effects detected in clinical trials has created confusion on the risk/benefit ratio induced by hormone administration. The hypothesis that agonists distinct to estrogens might improve the effects associated with estrogens is at the base of the increasing interest on the role of selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs). There is a lack of definitive clearcut clinical data o…
Compliance with the Surgery Safety Checklist: An Update on the Status
2022
WHO has recommended the implementation of the Surgery Safety Checklist (SSC) to reign in often simple logistic errors that lead to numerous complications, some of them being fatal, in the perioperative period. This study aims to discuss doubts presented in the medical literature concerning the effectiveness of SSC in the currently existing form. The article is based on the literature search performed in PubMed using the command phrase “Surgery Safety Checklist”. The search yielded 1,476 articles up to March 2021. Out of this group, we selected 811 articles for further detailed analysis. The selection was based on the meritorious SSC-related topicality and scrutinized content of the articles…
Response to Urrego et al
2015
Cancer‐associated venous thromboembolism: Treatment and prevention with rivaroxaban
2020
Abstract Cancer‐associated venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a frequent, potentially life‐threatening event that complicates cancer management. Anticoagulants are the cornerstone of therapy for the treatment and prevention of cancer‐associated thrombosis (CAT); factor Xa–inhibiting direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs; apixaban, edoxaban, and rivaroxaban), which have long been recommended for the treatment of VTE in patients without cancer, have been investigated in this setting. The first randomized comparisons of DOACs against low‐molecular‐weight heparin for the treatment of CAT indicated that DOACs are efficacious in this setting, with findings reflected in recent updates to published guidan…