Anticoagulation Flashcards

1
Q

class:
Indications:
MOA:
Dosage forms:
Dosing:
Max dose:
Contraindications:
Warnings:
Side Effects:
Monitoring:
Pearls/Notes:
Drug-Drug/Food interactions:

A
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2
Q

Notes:

A

CTA = clear to auscultation

RRR = regular rate and rhythm

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3
Q

Patients at High risk for developing a clot (mechanical valve) should receive ________

A

treatment dose parenteral anticoagulation once the INR is subtherapeutic.

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4
Q

High-risk condition:

A

mechanical aortic valve
+
risk factors (atrial fibrillation, prior ischemic stroke, hypertension, diabetes)

OR

mechanical mitral valve

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5
Q

Warfarin is held for ______1_______ prior to surgery, which results in ________2________.

If patient was bridged with UFH, then discontinue __________3_______ before surgery.

If patient was bridged with enoxaparin, then discontinue ______4______ before surgery.

A

1) 5 days (~40 hours half-life)

2) normalization of the INR- (INR < 1.5)

3) 4-6 hours

4) 24 hours

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6
Q

Macrocytic anemia is due to a __________________________________________________________

A

vitamin B12 or folate deficiency, or both

” so think of possible drugs that can cause” AND think of other comorbidities that can cause.

  • Chronic use of a PPI: can cause vitamin B12 deficiency
  • Long term use of metformin: Vitamin B12 deficiency
  • Alcoholism
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7
Q

Anticoagulants:

  • are used to prevent blood clots from forming and to keep existing clots from getting bigger. They DO NOT break down clots like fibrinolytics.
  • They are used in the prevention and treatment of VTE.
  • they are also used in the immediate treatment of (ACS) acute coronary syndromes (UA, NSTEMI and STEMI) AND prevention of cardioembolic stroke
A
  • the most common side effect with anticoagulants is bleeding, which can be fatal. For this reason, they are High alert medications.
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8
Q

The coagulation cascade has two pathways that when activated lead to fibrin formation and ultimately clot formation.

1)

2)

Anticoagulants inhibit different clotting factors in the coagulation cascade and prevent (or further stop) clot formation.

A

Contact Activation Pathway (Intrinsic) - minor pathway

Tissue Factor Pathway (Extrinsic) - activated by tissue damage/trauma

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9
Q

(AT) Antithrombin is one of the body’s natural anticoagulants; it inactivates _____________ and other proteases (like factor Xa) involved in blood clotting.

A

thrombin “factor IIa”

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10
Q

Parenteral anticoagulants are used for:

A
  • ACS treatment (UA, NSTEMI, STEMI)

-prevention/treatment of VTE

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11
Q

Oral anticoagulants are used for:

A
  • mainly prevention and treatment of VTE
  • stroke prevention in patients with atrial fibrillation
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12
Q

Vitamin K antagonist

A

warfarin

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13
Q

Factor Xa (Direct) Inhibitors

A

rivaroxaban
apixaban
edoxaban
betrixaban

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14
Q

Factor Xa (Indirect) Inhibitors

A

fondaparinux (Arixtra) - selective inhibition of factor Xa. - given SubQ

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15
Q

Direct Thrombin Inhibitors:

A
  • bind directly to factor IIa “thrombin” and block it. Which decreases the amount of fibrin available for clot formation.

IV- argatroban (Acova), bivalirudin (Angiomax)
PO- dabigatran (Pradaxa)

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16
Q

IV- argatroban (Acova), bivalirudin (Angiomax) are important clinically since they DO NOT cross react with HIT antibodies.

A
17
Q

Drugs that must bind to (AT) antithrombin to work.

so are indirect anticoagulants:

A

UFH - inhibit factor IIa and Xa equal.
LMWH - inhibit factor Xa more specifically.

fondaparinux (Arixtra) - selective inhibition of factor Xa. - given SubQ

these drugs bind to (AT) antithrombin, which causes a conformational change and increases antithrombin activity 1000-fold.

18
Q

Coumadin / Jantoven

class:
Indications:
MOA:
Dosage forms:
Dosing:
Max dose:
Contraindications:
Warnings:
Side Effects:
Monitoring:
Pearls/Notes:
Drug-Drug/Food interactions:

A

Warfarin

class: anticoagulant
- Is a Vitamin K antagonist. Vitamin K is required for the carboxylation “activation” of clotting factors II, VII, IX, and X.

Indications:

MOA: drug competitively inhibits the C1 subunit of the Vitamin K epoxide reductase enzyme (VKORC1). This reduces the regeneration of Vitamin K epoxide and causes depletion of active clotting factors II, VII, IX, and X and proteins.

Dosage forms:

Dosing:

Max dose:

Contraindications:

Warnings:

Side Effects:

Monitoring:

Pearls/Notes:

Drug-Drug/Food interactions:

19
Q

(UFH) Unfractionated Heparin

class:
Indications:
MOA:
Dosage forms:
Dosing:
Max dose:
Contraindications:
Warnings:
Side Effects:
Monitoring:
Pearls/Notes:
Drug-Drug/Food interactions:

A

class: anticoagulant

Indications:

Prevention “prophylaxis” VTE

Treatment VTE

Treatment ACS

MOA: drug binds to antithrombin (AT) first (Indirect action), then this causes a conformational change leading to increased activity 1000-fold. It then goes on to inactivate thrombin (factor IIa) and factor Xa. Which ultimately prevents the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin.

Dosage forms:

Dosing:

Max dose:

Contraindications:

Warnings:

Side Effects:
* bleeding, HIT, decreased platelets, increased K, osteoporosis

Monitoring:

Pearls/Notes:

Drug-Drug/Food interactions:

20
Q

If HIT is suspected, need to manage quickly.

STOP all forms of heparin and LMWH (heparin flushes too - use regional citrate)

STOP warfarin and reverse with Vitamin K

Use a non-heparin anticoagulant, a direct thrombin inhibitor, such as argatroban

Re-start warfarin at a lower dose (5mg or less) when platelets reach > or = to 150,000

A
21
Q
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22
Q
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