collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33447524/clinical-considerations-of-coagulopathy-in-acute-liver-failure
#1
REVIEW
Ahyoung Kim, Bolin Niu, Tinsay Woreta, Po-Hung Chen
Acute liver failure (ALF) is the rapid onset of severe liver dysfunction, defined by the presence of hepatic encephalopathy and impaired synthetic function (international normalized ratio of ≥1.5) in the absence of underlying liver disease. The elevated international normalized ratio value in ALF is often misinterpreted as an increased hemorrhagic tendency, which can lead to inappropriate, prophylactic transfusions of blood products. However, global assessments of coagulopathy via viscoelastic tests or thrombin generation assay suggest a reestablished hemostatic, or even hypercoagulable, status in patients with ALF...
December 28, 2020: Journal of Clinical and Translational Hepatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30202500/the-misunderstood-coagulopathy-of-liver-disease-a-review-for-the-acute-setting
#2
REVIEW
Michael F Harrison
The international normalized ratio (INR) represents a clinical tool to assess the effectiveness of vitamin-K antagonist therapy. However, it is often used in the acute setting to assess the degree of coagulopathy in patients with hepatic cirrhosis or acute liver failure. This often influences therapeutic decisions about invasive procedures or the need for potentially harmful and unnecessary transfusions of blood product. This may not represent a best-practice or evidence-based approach to patient care. The author performed a review of the literature related to the utility of INR in cirrhotic patients using several scientific search engines...
September 2018: Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26637729/coagulopathy-in-liver-disease-a-balancing-act
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jody L Kujovich
Liver disease results in complex alterations of all 3 phases of hemostasis. It is now recognized that hemostasis is rebalanced in chronic liver disease. The fall in clotting factor levels is accompanied by a parallel fall in anticoagulant proteins. High von Willebrand factor levels counteract defects in primary hemostasis. Conventional coagulation tests do not fully reflect the derangement in hemostasis and do not accurately predict the risk of bleeding. Global coagulation assays (thrombin generation, thromboelastography) reflect the interaction between procoagulant factors, anticoagulant factors, platelets, and the fibrinolytic system and show promise for assessing bleeding risk and guiding therapy...
2015: Hematology—the Education Program of the American Society of Hematology
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