Venous Thromboembolism: Antiplatelets and bleeding management and antidotes(recorded lecture) Flashcards
what are the medication classes
COX-1 inhibitors
- aspirin
ADP receptor inhibitors
GPIIb/IIIa receptor blockers
Phosphodiesterase-3 inhibitors
- dipyridamole
Protease-Activated Receptor inhibitors
Antiplatelet use in VTE
- Limited role in VTE due to increased risk of bleeding
- adjunct role to thrombolytics
- Significant role in ACS and other arterial ischemic vascular disorders
Bleeding management steps
Discontinue medication
Apply manual compression
Maintain BP
Surgical or radiological intervention
Blood products (+/-) PCC (+/-) antidotes
Target reversal drugs for bleeding management
UFH, LMWH : Protamine sulfate
Dabigatran : Idarucizumab (praxbind)
Factor Xa inhibitors : andexanet alfa
Bleeding management considerations
- activated charcoal less than or equal to 2 hours of bleeding
- Hemodialysis : dabigatran only
-Tranexamic acid
Protamine sulfate use for UFH and LMWH
rapidly reverses the effects of heparins in life threatening hemorrhage or great heparin excess
Adverse reactions: hypotension, bradycardia
Idarucizumab (Praxbind) use for thrombin inhibitors
MOA, adverse reactions, and monitoring schedule
MOA: direct binder to dabigatran
AE: delirium, constipation, hypokalemia, fever, pneumonia, and HA
Monitoring schedule
Baseline aPPT –> repeat in 2 hours –> every 12 hour until normal
Andexanet use for Xa inhibitors
mimics factor Xa so it can bind to the inhibitory drugs without producing enzymatic activity