999 resultados para Tranexamic Acid
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Introduction: Paediatric patients who undergo posterior spinal fusion surgery to correct scoliosis often require multiple blood transfusions. Tranexamic acid is a synthetic antifibrinolytic drug that reduces transfusion requirements in scoliosis surgery (1),(2),(3). Methods: To evaluate the efficacy of prophylactic tranexamic acid (TA) (initial dose of 10mg/kg and infusion of 1mg.kg(-1).h(-1)) in reducing perioperative blood transfusion requirements, we reviewed patients files and compared the amount of blood lost and blood transfused in the perioperative period of 12 patients (54.5%) that received TA and 10 patients (45.5%) who did not received TA. T-Student test was applied. Results: The average difference of blood losses (2,67 +/- 6,06ml) and blood transfused (212,9 +/- 101,1ml) between the two groups was not statistically significant (p>0.05). No thrombotic complications were detected in either group. Discussion: Results of the current study showed that prophylactic low dose of TA did not have a significant effect in the management of intraoperative blood loss and transfusion requirements in children undergoing scoliosis surgery. It is important to emphasize that our study is retrospective and that the size of the sample is small. Further studies are needed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of TA on paediatric scoliosis surgery.
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Background. In cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) patients, fibrinolysis may enhance postoperative inflammatory response. We aimed to determine whether an additional postoperative dose of antifibrinolytic tranexamic acid (TA) reduced CPB-mediated inflammatory response (IR). Methods. We performed a randomized, double-blind, dose-dependent, parallel-groups study of elective CPB patients receiving TA. Patients were randomly assigned to either the single-dose group (40 mg/Kg TA before CPB and placebo after CPB) or the double-dose group (40 mg/Kg TA before and after CPB). Results. 160 patients were included, 80 in each group. The incident rate of IR was significantly lower in the double-dose-group TA2 (7.5% vs. 18.8% in the single-dose group TA1; P = 0.030). After adjusting for hypertension, total protamine dose and temperature after CPB, TA2 showed a lower risk of IR compared with TA1 [OR: 0.29 (95% CI: 0.10-0.83), (P = 0.013)]. Relative risk for IR was 2.5 for TA1 (95% CI: 1.02 to 6.12). The double-dose group had significantly lower chest tube bleeding at 24 hours [671 (95% CI 549-793 vs. 826 (95% CI 704-949) mL; P = 0.01 corrected-P significant] and lower D-dimer levels at 24 hours [489 (95% CI 437-540) vs. 621(95% CI: 563-679) ng/mL; P = 0.01 corrected-P significant]. TA2 required lower levels of norepinephrine at 24 h [0.06 (95% CI: 0.03-0.09) vs. 0.20(95 CI: 0.05-0.35) after adjusting for dobutamine [F = 6.6; P = 0.014 corrected-P significant]. We found a significant direct relationship between IL-6 and temperature (rho = 0.26; P < 0.01), D-dimer (rho = 0.24; P < 0.01), norepinephrine (rho = 0.33; P < 0.01), troponin I (rho = 0.37; P < 0.01), Creatine-Kinase (rho = 0.37; P < 0.01), Creatine Kinase-MB (rho = 0.33; P < 0.01) and lactic acid (rho = 0.46; P < 0.01) at ICU arrival. Two patients (1.3%) had seizure, 3 patients (1.9%) had stroke, 14 (8.8%) had acute kidney failure, 7 (4.4%) needed dialysis, 3 (1.9%) suffered myocardial infarction and 9 (5.6%) patients died. We found no significant differences between groups regarding these events. Conclusions. Prolonged inhibition of fibrinolysis, using an additional postoperative dose of tranexamic acid reduces inflammatory response and postoperative bleeding (but not transfusion requirements) in CPB patients. A question which remains unanswered is whether the dose used was ideal in terms of safety, but not in terms of effectiveness.
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Cardiopulmonary bypass is frequently associated with excessive blood loss. Platelet dysfunction is the main cause of non-surgical bleeding after open-heart surgery. We randomized 65 patients in a double-blind fashion to receive tranexamic acid or placebo in order to determine whether antifibrinolytic therapy reduces chest tube drainage. The tranexamic acid group received an intravenous loading dose of 10 mg/kg, before the skin incision, followed by a continuous infusion of 1 mg kg-1 h-1 for 5 h. The placebo group received a bolus of normal saline solution and continuous infusion of normal saline for 5 h. Postoperative bleeding and fibrinolytic activity were assessed. Hematologic data, convulsive seizures, allogeneic transfusion, occurrence of myocardial infarction, mortality, allergic reactions, postoperative renal insufficiency, and reopening rate were also evaluated. The placebo group had a greater postoperative blood loss (median (25th to 75th percentile) 12 h after surgery (540 (350-750) vs 300 (250-455) mL, P = 0.001). The placebo group also had greater blood loss 24 h after surgery (800 (520-1050) vs 500 (415-725) mL, P = 0.008). There was a significant increase in plasma D-dimer levels after coronary artery bypass grafting only in patients of the placebo group, whereas no significant changes were observed in the group treated with tranexamic acid. The D-dimer levels were 1057 (1025-1100) µg/L in the placebo group and 520 (435-837) µg/L in the tranexamic acid group (P = 0.01). We conclude that tranexamic acid effectively reduces postoperative bleeding and fibrinolysis in patients undergoing first-time coronary artery bypass grafting compared to placebo.
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Peer reviewed
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Two peptides, textilinins 1 and 2, isolated from the venom of the Australian common brown snake, Pseudonaja textilis textilis, are effective in preventing blood loss. To further investigate the potential of textilinins as anti-haemorrhagic agents, we cloned cDNAs encoding these proteins. The isolated full-length cDNA (430 bp in size) was shown to code for a 59 amino acid protein, corresponding in size to the native peptide, plus an additional 24 amino acid propeptide. Six such cDNAs were identified, differing in nucleotide sequence in the coding region but with an identical propeptide. All six sequences predicted peptides containing six conserved cysteines common to Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors. When expressed as glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins and released by cleavage with thrombin, only those peptides corresponding to textilinin 1 and 2 were active in inhibiting plasmin with K-i values similar to those of their native counterparts and in binding to plasmin less tightly than aprotinin by two orders of magnitude. Similarly, in the mouse tail vein blood loss model only recombinant textilinin 1 and 2 were effective in reducing blood loss. These recombinant textilinins have potential as therapeutic agents for reducing blood loss in humans, obviating the need for reliance on aprotinin, a bovine product with possible risk of transmissible disease, and compromising the fibrinolytic system in a less irreversible manner.
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Emergency medicine physicians aim to stabilize or restore vital functions, establish diagnosis, initiate specific treatments and adequately orientate patients. This year, new evidences have improved our knowledge about diagnostic strategy for patients with acute non traumatic headache, treatment of acute atrial fibrillation and outpatient management of acute pulmonary embolism. Reducing injection pain of local anesthetics, reducing irradiation by using alternative diagnostic tools in appendicitis suspicion, and identification of trauma patients who benefit from tranexamic acid administration are other illustrations of the efforts to improve efficacy, safety and comfort in the management of emergency patients.
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OBJECTIVES: This systematic review aims to assess the risks (both thromboembolic and bleeding) of an oral anticoagulation therapy (OAT) patient undergoing implant therapy and to provide a management protocol to patients under OAT undergoing implant therapy. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Medline, Cochrane Data Base of Systematic Reviews, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and EMBASE (from 1980 to December 2008) were searched for English-language articles published between 1966 and 2008. This search was completed by a hand research accessing the references cited in all identified publications. RESULTS: Nineteen studies were identified reporting outcomes after oral surgery procedures (mostly dental extractions in patients on OAT following different management protocols and haemostatic therapies). Five studies were randomized-controlled trials (RCTs), 11 were controlled clinical trials (CCTs) and three were prospective case series. The OAT management strategies as well as the protocols during and after surgery were different. This heterogeneity prevented any possible data aggregation and synthesis. The results from these studies are very homogeneous, reporting minor bleeding in very few patients, without a significant difference between the OAT patients who continue with the vitamin K antagonists vs. the patients who stopped this medication before surgery. These post-operative bleeding events were controlled only with local haemostatic measures: tranexamic acid mouthwashes, gelatine sponges and cellulose gauzes's application were effective. Post-operative bleeding did not correlate with the international normalised ratio (INR) status. In none of the studies was a thromboembolic event reported. CONCLUSIONS: OAT patients (INR 2-4) who do not discontinue the AC medication do not have a significantly higher risk of post-operative bleeding than non-OAT patients and they also do not have a higher risk of post-operative bleeding than OAT patients who discontinue the medication. In patients with OAT (INR 2-4) without discontinuation, topical haemostatic agents were effective in preventing post-operative bleeding. OAT discontinuation is not recommended for minor oral surgery, such as single tooth extraction or implant placement, provided that this does not involve autogenous bone grafts, extensive flaps or osteotomy preparations extending outside the bony envelope. Evidence does not support that dental implant placement in patients on OAT is contraindicated.
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En cirugía cardiaca el sangrado perioperatorio y por consiguiente la necesidad de transfundir productos sanguíneos son el mayor contribuyente al incremento de la morbimortalidad en este grupo de pacientes. Existen estrategias para disminuir el sangrado y el requerimiento de transfusiones, como el uso de de ácido tranexamico (AT) el cual parece estar implicado en el desarrollo de convulsiones luego de cirugía cardiaca. En este estudio retrospectivo desarrollado en la Fundación Cardio Infantil (FCI) examinamos la relación entre el uso de AT y la aparición de convulsiones luego de cirugía cardiaca. Nuestra revisión fue hecha en 679 pacientes de los cuales 20 presentaron episodios convulsivos luego de cirugía cardiaca, sin demostrarse lesiones isquémicas en la valoración imagenológica (TAC) en un periodo que comprendía desde abril 1del 2008 hasta mayo 31 del 2009. Nosotros encontramos que la incidencia de convulsiones después de cirugía cardiaca en nuestra institución en este periodo fue de 2.9 % y encontramos una asociación estadísticamente significativa entre el uso de AT y la presencia de falla renal (p=0.006) con un incremento lineal en la probabilidad de convulsionar con los valores de creatinina (p=0.036). Nosotros concluimos que la incidencia de convulsiones es baja y multifactorial siendo el principal factor de riesgo la presencia de falla renal, posiblemente por ser esta la principal vía de eliminación del medicamento, generando así un incremento de las concentraciones séricas del mismo y produciendo antagonismo del receptor GABA asociado a vasoespasmo que desencadenaría clínicamente un evento convulsivo.
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Introducción: Las enfermedades cardiovasculares son las primeras causas de morbilidad y mortalidad en los registros globales, teniendo en cuenta que muchas de ellas son susceptibles de manejo quirúrgico, es cada vez más importante conocer las complicaciones post operatorias neurológicas de tales procedimientos. Objetivos: Evaluar la presencia de factores predictores para el desarrollo de crisis epilépticas en el periodo pos operatorio de cirugías cardiovasculares. Materiales y métodos: Estudio de casos y controles, en pacientes sometidos a cirugías cardiovasculares en la Fundación Cardioinfantil entre los años 2008 y 2009. Resultados: Se analizaron 641 historias de pacientes, de los cuales 22 presentaron crisis durante el post operatorio y 66 pacientes se tomaron como controles. En 4 de los 22 pacientes quienes presentaron convulsiones (18.1%) no fue usado acido tranexamico durante la intervención teniendo esto una significancia estadística (p= 0.003). Conclusión: El uso de ácido tranexámico en los equipos de circulación extra-corpórea durante las citadas cirugías cardiovasculares podría ser un factor protector para la presentación de crisis epilépticas en el post operatorio. Los valores de creatinina elevados podrían ser un factor de riesgo para el desarrollo de convulsiones pero es necesario realizar nuevos estudios con un tamaño probable de muestra más grande y dirigida a evidenciar la relación entre estos.
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La cirugía cardiaca con circulación extracorpórea tiene riesgo de lesión del sistema nervioso central que impacta negativamente el desenlace postoperatorio. Su espectro es variable siendo lo más frecuente la lesión isquémica. Sin embargo esta no es la única complicación neurológica, las convulsiones también tienen un impacto significativo sobre la morbimortalidad y se asocian a un incremento de la estancia hospitalaria. Mientras que los eventos isquémicos tras cirugía cardiaca están bien caracterizados, existen pocos datos acerca de las convulsiones postoperatorias de origen no isquémico. Dentro de las teorías postuladas para explicar estos fenómenos llama la atención el potencial epileptogénico de los medicamentos antifibrinolíticos, ampliamente utilizados con el objetivo de minimizar el sangrado y reducir la exposición a hemoderivados. Numerosos reportes sugieren que el ácido tranexámico puede inducir actividad convulsiva en el postoperatorio. El objetivo de este estudio retrospectivo de casos y controles fue examinar los factores asociados con convulsiones postoperatorias en pacientes sometidos a cirugía cardiaca con circulación extracorpórea que recibieron ácido tranexámico. Todos los pacientes sometidos a cirugía cardiaca con circulación extracorpórea entre Enero de 2008 y Diciembre de 2009 fueron identificados. Los casos se definieron como aquellos pacientes que convulsionaron y requirieron inicio de anticonvulsivantes dentro de las 48 horas post-quirúrgicas. Los criterios de exclusión incluyeron epilepsia preexistente y pacientes con alguna lesión isquémica nueva en neuroimágen. Los controles fueron seleccionados aleatoriamente a partir de la cohorte inicial. Se analizaron un total de 28 casos y 112 controles. Se evidenció una asociación entre disfunción renal, valores elevados de creatinina preoperatoria y convulsiones postoperatorias.
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An external fixation technique, using a circular fixator, to obtain arthrodesis was evaluated in 2 dogs with infected open lesions and soft tissue damage. In both cases, articular cartilage was curetted, and devitalized bone and necrotic soft tissue were removed. No bone graft was used. The wounds were maintained open and the dogs received postoperative antibiotic therapy. The arthrodesis site was compressed progressively as needed. Infection was eradicated and bony union was obtained in both dogs. It was concluded that the use of a circular fixator is an effective method to achieve arthrodesis.
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Processo FAPESP: 2012/24545-3
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The bone repair process is controlled by complex molecular mechanisms that involve systemic and local factors. Fibrin glue is derived from human plasma and mimics the final pathway of coagulation network. Tranexamic acid inhibits fibrinolysis and prevents or decreases the formation of degradation products of fibrin and fibrinogen. The purpose of this study was to evaluate histologically in rats the effect of tranexamic acid associated with the fibrin glue on bone healing. The experiment used 60 (n = 5) male rats in: GI: Control, GII: fibrin glue, GIII tranexamic acid and GIV /fibrin glue/tranexamic acid. Bone defect (2.5mm diameter) was created in right tibia. The animals were euthanized at 7,14 and 30 days postoperatively, and the pieces were processed with hematoxylin and eosin. The results showed at 7 days post-operative surgical cavity filled with dense connective tissue rich in fibroblasts, permeated by delicate neoformed bone trabeculae in percentage of 70-80% for GI, GII and GIII and GIV to 94.8%. At 14 days post-operative newly formed bone was found between 75-85% for GI, GII and GIII and percentage above 95% for GIV. At 30 days postoperative GI and GIV showed 95-100% of mature bone tissue; GII and GIII in percentage close to 80-90%. Based on the results and methodology is concluded that fibrin / tranexamic acid glue association has positive action on bone repair.