Agian
Well-known member
There was a paper you uploaded some time ago, about bleeding that concluded the rates were the same between self-managers and the general population. I meant to read it, but didn't get around to it. I looked up your old posts, but the forum didn't allow me to go back far enough.
So, this is it then?
The paper challenges the findings of older studies: "Survival after aortic valve replacement is reported to be significantly lower compared with the general age-matched population, especially in younger adult patients." (References 1-3; 2000, 1989, 2005); and concludes: "In contrast to older reports, relative survival in these selected young adult patients closely resembles that of the general population, possibly a result of highly specialized self-management anticoagulation treatment, better timing of surgery, and improved patient selection in more recent years."
But back to the issue of bleeding. I would have thought this would be rarer in the general population, as compared to those on Warfarin, even if control was tight.
So, this is it then?
The paper challenges the findings of older studies: "Survival after aortic valve replacement is reported to be significantly lower compared with the general age-matched population, especially in younger adult patients." (References 1-3; 2000, 1989, 2005); and concludes: "In contrast to older reports, relative survival in these selected young adult patients closely resembles that of the general population, possibly a result of highly specialized self-management anticoagulation treatment, better timing of surgery, and improved patient selection in more recent years."
But back to the issue of bleeding. I would have thought this would be rarer in the general population, as compared to those on Warfarin, even if control was tight.