Hip replacement and blood thinners? - what dose a hip replacement joint look like when it is disconnected
I had a hip replacement 10 days ago, my doc told me now thinner than a blood test, a call to a double dose of my ..... I do not understand, I have no problems with ...
2 comments:
His blood tests showed he still has the platelet activity (please specify) or immobility, so the doc increased the dose. This will prevent a fatal pulmonary embolism or deep vein thrombosis, including stroke.
The good news is that in the absence of atrial fibrillation, anticoagulant is temporary.
I also took warfarin anticoagulation for approximately 5 weeks after my hip surgery. If you are taking warfarin [Coumadin] is common to frequent blood tests carried out that his "pro-time" show [prothrombin time], or the time to take the blood to clot. Here are more details about this test and what are their average results.
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=we ...
In any case, warfarin is known to be careful and certain changes in diet can mean that the dose should be adjusted - either up or down. You can not congeal the blood too thin or. When blood is too thin to clot too quickly and you can create a form dangerous blood clots and lung have. The idea is to keep only the appropriate level.
As a rule they consider Protime days in the hospital, his then weekly up to a dose seems to best respond to your diet. The patient is advised to avoid certain foods (spinach is one of them). The best way is to follow a diet, essentially equal to the entire treatment period, and foods that change from the ground up to avoid your Protime. SOMETEMI in patient instruction is given in making the food. Even if a daily vitamin pill can change the definition.
There was evidence Protime week, 5 weeks and the doctor called me every week to adjust my dose if needed. He jumped a bit, but then stabilized at a dose that was correct.
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