Bronchial thermoplasty in a patient with difficult-to-control asthma

Worldwide, venous thromboembolism (VTE) is among the leading causes of death from cardiovascular disease, surpassed only by acute myocardial infarction and stroke. The spectrum of VTE presentations ranges, by degree of severity, from deep vein thrombosis to acute pulmonary thromboembolism. Treatment is based on full anticoagulation of the patients. For many decades, it has been known that anticoagulation directly affects the mortality associated with VTE. Until the beginning of this century, anticoagulant therapy was based on the use of unfractionated or low-molecular-weight heparin and vitamin K antagonists, warfarin in particular. Over the past decades, new classes of anticoagulants have been developed, such as factor Xa inhibitors and direct thrombin inhibitors, which significantly changed the therapeutic arsenal against VTE, due to their efficacy and safety when compared with the conventional treatment. The focus of this review was on evaluating the role of these new anticoagulants in this clinical context.O tromboembolismo venoso (TEV) está entre as principais causas de morte por doenças cardiovasculares no mundo, atrás apenas do infarto agudo do miocárdio e do acidente vascular cerebral. O TEV possui espectro de apresentação que vai desde a trombose venosa profunda até o tromboembolismo pulmonar agudo, de acordo com gravidade crescente de acometimento, sendo seu tratamento baseado na anticoagulação plena dos pacientes. Há muitas décadas, sabe-se que a anticoa...
Source: Jornal Brasileiro de Pneumologia - Category: Respiratory Medicine Source Type: research