certainly could have been worded better lol
Well if this research is to be believed and if you are showing signs of valve leaflet stiffening then perhaps this would reverse that.skeptic49;n859141 said:...So what is the bottom line for us tissue valvers? Do we need ACT or not?
Exactly ! All patients with age related degererative calcification of the aortic valve (tri-leadlet) would be treated with warfarin and so avoid the need for AVR !cldlhd;n859146 said:I I can't imagine warfarin would have a significant,if at all, positive effect if the limited motion was due to calcification. First of all there is some research that shows warfarin MAY lead to calcification and also because there are a lot of patients out there who have stenosis/calcification and are in warfarin. If it improved that condition I think it would have been discovered by now.
First time to hear this ... do you have any references? In fact normally I hear the exact opposite (that it contributed to decalcification, which has never been substantiated by subsequent studies)Paleogirl;n859145 said:Warfarin can lead to calcification so does that sound a good idea to take it with tissue valve stiffening ?
High doses of warfarin cause focal calcification of the elastic lamellae in the media of major arteries and in aortic heart valves in the rat.
... ok so multiply that x10 to make it Kg (normal discussion of doses are in mg/Kg bodyweight, but rats aren't so heavy) which means they gave 15mg per Kg twice a day ... high isn't it?The first warfarin dose, 15 mg/100 g, and 1.5 mg vitamin K[SUB]1[/SUB]/100 g were administered at 8 AM when rats reached 42 days of age. A second 15 mg/100 g dose of warfarin was administered at 8 PM with no accompanying vitamin K. This routine was maintained every day until termination of the experiment
Warfarin treatment did not affect bone growth, overall weight gain, or serum calcium and phosphorus levels, and, because of the concurrent administration of vitamin K, prothrombin times and hematocrits were normal.
Though no specific guidelines are currently available to prevent or treat this less-recognized side effect, discontinuing warfarin and using an alternative anticoagulant seems to be a reasonable option. Newer anticoagulants such as dabigatran and rivaroxaban offer promise as future therapeutic options in such cases.
Agian;n859174 said:So Pel,
These rats were given high doses of rat poison
d survived to get calcium in their arteries.
:Scared:
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