AI Article Synopsis

  • Incidence of oral anticoagulant-associated intracerebral hemorrhage is increasing, posing significant risks of ongoing bleeding, death, or disability in patients using vitamin K1 antagonists.
  • Urgent management focuses on reversing coagulopathy quickly through the discontinuation of anticoagulants and the administration of vitamin K1, prothrombin complex concentrates, or fresh-frozen plasma, as well as life support and potential surgery.
  • There is a lack of strong evidence comparing different reversal strategies, thus emphasizing the need for awareness of current guidelines to avoid legal implications for physicians due to inappropriate treatment approaches.

Article Abstract

Oral anticoagulant-associated intracerebral hemorrhage is increasing in incidence and is the most feared complication of therapy with vitamin K1 antagonists. Anticoagulant-associated intracerebral hemorrhage has a high risk of ongoing bleeding, death, or disability. The most important aspect of clinical management of anticoagulant-associated intracerebral hemorrhage is represented by urgent reversal of coagulopathy, decreasing as quickly as possible the international normalized ratio to values ≤1·4, preferably ≤1·2, together with life support and surgical therapy, when indicated. Protocols for anticoagulant-associated intracerebral hemorrhage emphasize the immediate discontinuation of anticoagulant medication and the immediate intravenous administration of vitamin K1 (mean dose: 10-20 mg), and the use of prothrombin complex concentrates (variable doses calculated estimate circulating functional prothrombin complex) or fresh-frozen plasma (15-30 ml/kg) or recombinant activated factor VII (15-120 μg/kg). Because of cost and availability, there is limited randomized evidence comparing different reversal strategies that support a specific treatment regimen. In this paper, we emphasize the growing importance of anticoagulant-associated intracerebral hemorrhage and describe options for acute coagulopathy reversal in this setting. Additionally, emphasis is placed on understanding current consensus-based guidelines for coagulopathy reversal and the challenges of determining best evidence for these treatments. On the basis of the available knowledge, inappropriate adherence to current consensus-based guidelines for coagulopathy reversal may expose the physician to medico-legal implications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-4949.2011.00595.xDOI Listing

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