Heparins Flashcards
1
Q
What are some examples of heparins
A
Enoxaparin + dalteparin (LMWHs), unfractioned heparin
2
Q
What are the common indications of use
A
- Venous thromboembolism (VTE) –> LMWH = 1st line for prophylaxis + initial Tx DVT + PE
- Acute coronary syndrome - LMWH + fondaparinux = 1st line for revascularisation + prevent intracoronary thrombus progression
3
Q
What are the mechanisms of action
A
- Inhibit Thrombin + Factor Xa (final components of common coag pathway –> prevents formation fibrin clot)
- Unfractioned heparin –> activates antithrombin –> inactives factor Xa + thrombin
LMWH - similar but preferential inhibition factor Xa
Fondaparinux - synthetic compound similar to heparin –> inhibits factor xa only
4
Q
What are the side effects
A
- Bleeding (risk lower in fondaparinux)
- Injection site reaction
- Heparin-induced-thrombocytopenia (low platelet count)
5
Q
What are some contraindications
A
CAUTION
- Clotting disorder
- Severe uncontrolled hypertension
- Recent surgery or trauma
- renal impairment - accumulate
AVOIDED - invasive procedures (e.g. LP or spinal anaesthesia)
6
Q
What are some interactions
A
- Shouldn’t be combiend with other anti-thrombotic medication unless reason
e. g. use of LMWH when initiating warfarin
7
Q
What can be given to reverse anti-coagulation
A
Protamine (effective for UFH but less in LMWH + not at all in fonaparinux)