Aspirin bests warfarin to prevent blood clots in kids after heart surgery
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Aspirin should be favoured over warfarin to prevent blood clotting in children who undergo a surgery that replumbs their hearts, according to a new study.
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jesse orrico
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Patients are at an increased risk of thromboembolic complications because of the nature of the Fontan physiology. As such, warfarin or aspirin is generally prescribed lifelong for thromboprophylaxis.
Researchers at Murdoch Children's Research Institute have found in a new study that Aspirin should be favoured over warfarin to prevent blood clotting in children who undergo Fontan surgery that replumbs their hearts. The study will have implications for clinicians when prescribing blood thinning medications after Fontan surgery, a complex congenital heart disease operation redirecting blood flow from the lower body to the lungs.
The research has been published in The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery.
This study aimed to compare long-term rates of cerebrovascular injury, thrombosis, bleeding, bone mineral density, and quality of life in people living with Fontan circulation receiving warfarin compared with aspirin.
The Fontan procedure is offered to children born with severe heart defects, allowing the child to live with just one pumping heart chamber instead of two.
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