Warfarin, coumadin, heparin and others.
Anticoagulants are referred to as "blood thinners" even though they do not actually effect the viscosity of the blood instead they act on the liver to prevent blood from clotting in high risk patients such as those who have been bed ridden for a prolonged period of time or have undergone surgery.
(to correct the previous answer asprin is not an anticoagulant)
to prevent blood from clotting
Anticoagulants and corticotropin become less effective when used with belladonna.
thrombolytics, aspirin, anticoagulants, painkillers and tranquilizers, beta-blockers, ace-inhibitors, nitrates, rhythm-stabilizing drugs, and diuretics.
Diet is a very important consideration because the amount of vitamin K in the body affects how anticoagulant drugs work.
antiseizure drugs such as phenytoin (Dilantin) and carbamazepine (Tegretol), anticoagulants such as warfarin (Coumadin), and drugs that slow the central nervous system such as alprazolam (Xanax), diazepam (Valium), and secobarbital (Seconal).
The long-term use of antacids may decrease the efficacy of the vitamin, as can certain anticoagulants. Warfarin is an anticoagulant that antagonizes vitamin K.
Yes. Daffodils do have anticoagulants and 15 grams of daffodil bulbs can be fatal to a dog.
It can happen as the result of an injury . but is more likely to hap-en to people with a predisposition to hemorrhage such as those taking anticoagulants drugs like warfarin.
Hepatic microsomal enzyme induction or in other words the stimulation of the microsomal enzymes of the liver occur as a result of administration of certain drugs such as Phenobarbitone, Phenytoin or Carbamezapine. These drugs stimulate this enzyme system in the liver and accelerate the metabolism of other substances such as Coumarin anticoagulants that are administered to a person to prevent clotting tendency. In that case, the physician would consider increasing the dose of the Coumarin anticoagulants to achieve an optimum effect since the accelerated metabolism of these drugs will not produce the desired effect.
Due to the slight risk of bleeding during or after this procedure, aspirin, aspirin-containing medications, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and anticoagulants and antiplatelet drugs should be withheld for at least five days before the test.
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anticoagulants and platelet inhibitory drugs offer the same thing - they stop the clotting process. This is often important for persons who are at risk for stroke or embolism formation. An embolism is a thrombus (blood clot) that detaches from it's stationary position and travels through a persons blood vessels. This can cause a plethora of problems like pulmonary embolism (clot in the lungs) or stroke (clot obstructing blood flow to the brain). Anticoagulants and blood thinners all work to lower the risk of these things happening in people with risk factors like heart diseases, blood vessel diseases, etc.... It's important to know that these drugs also increase the bleed risk for patients and sometimes may be contraindicated by other conditions a patient may have.