Filtered By:
Condition: Diabetes
Drug: Coumadin

This page shows you your search results in order of relevance. This is page number 14.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 215 results found since Jan 2013.

Concerns about clinical efficacy and safety of warfarin in diabetic patients with atrial fibrillation
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is one of the most common arrhythmias in elderly people. The risk of thromboembolic stroke is increased in AF patients, especially those with diabetes. Anticoagulant therapy, such as w...
Source: Cardiovascular Diabetology - January 28, 2019 Category: Cardiology Authors: Sho-ichi Yamagishi Tags: Commentary Source Type: research

A prospective survey of the persistence of warfarin or NOAC in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation: a COmparison study of Drugs for symptom control and complication prEvention of Atrial Fibrillation (CODE-AF).
Conclusions: Nonpersistence was significantly lower with NOAC than VKA in both the maintenance and new-starter groups. In only the new-starter group, apixaban or edoxaban showed higher persistence rates than rivaroxaban. PMID: 31014064 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine - April 24, 2019 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Kim H, Lee YS, Kim TH, Cha MJ, Lee JM, Park J, Park JK, Kang KW, Shim J, Uhm JS, Park HW, Choi EK, Kim JB, Kim C, Kim J, Joung B Tags: Korean J Intern Med Source Type: research

Strategies for Reversal of Warfarin Following Acute Bleed
A patient with altered mental status presents via EMS after being found by family. She has a medical history significant for hypertension, diabetes, and atrial fibrillation for which she receives oral anticoagulation for stroke prevention. After the initial workup comes back negative, a computed tomographic scan of the brain is performed and the patient is found to have a large intraparenchymal hemorrhage that extends into the ventricles.
Source: Journal of Emergency Nursing: JEN - April 30, 2019 Category: Nursing Authors: Brian W. Gilbert, Tessa Reynolds, Joel B. Huffman, Katherine Hall Tags: Pharm/Tox Corner Source Type: research

How can the results of the COMPASS trial benefit patients with coronary or peripheral artery disease in Poland.
Abstract Aspirin decreases the risk of recurrent thrombotic events in patients with coronary artery disease or peripheral artery disease but the risk of recurrent events remains high. Long term dual antiplatelet therapy or the combination of aspirin and warfarin further reduces the risk of recurrent events, but at the cost of increased bleeding and neither of these treatments reduce mortality. The Cardiovascular OutcoMes in People using Anticoagulation StrategieS randomised controlled trial involving 27,395 patients from 602 sites in 33 countries (Poland: 9 sites, 518 patients) tested whether low-dose anticoagulan...
Source: Polish Heart Journal - May 29, 2019 Category: Cardiology Authors: Kruger PC, Guzik TJ, Eikelboom JW Tags: Kardiol Pol Source Type: research

The continuous challenge of antithrombotic strategies in diabetes: focus on direct oral anticoagulants
AbstractDirect oral anticoagulants (DOACs) include dabigatran, which inhibits thrombin, and apixaban, edoxaban, and rivaroxaban, which inhibit factor Xa. They have been extensively studied in large trials involving patients affected by the most common cardiovascular diseases. As the presence of diabetes leads to peculiar changes in primary and secondary hemostasis, in this review we highlight the current evidence regarding DOAC use in diabetic patients included in the majority of recently conducted studies. Overall, in trials involving patients with atrial fibrillation, data seem to confirm at least a similar efficacy and ...
Source: Acta Diabetologica - September 23, 2019 Category: Endocrinology Source Type: research

Factors Affecting Prognosis in Patients With Spontaneous Supratentorial Intracerebral Hemorrhage Under Medical and Surgical Treatment
Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is a vascular brain disease that causes very high rates of death and disability. Whether surgical or medical treatment is more appropriate is controversial. The purpose of the study was to examine the morbidity and mortality rates of surgical and medical therapy and their differences in order to determine which patients should be operated. In our study, the authors selected randomly and evaluated retrospectively 49 patients who were operated in Haydarpaşa Numune Research and Education Hospital Neurosurgery Clinic and 51 patients who received medical therapy at Neurology Clinic ...
Source: Journal of Craniofacial Surgery - October 1, 2019 Category: Surgery Tags: Brief Clinical Studies Source Type: research

Relationship of White Matter Lesions with Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion and Functional Outcome: MISTIE II and CLEAR III
ConclusionsConcomitant WML does not increase the odds for HE in patients with ICH but increases the odds for poor functional outcome.Clinical Trial Registrationhttp://www.clinicaltrials.gov trial-identifiers: NCT00224770 and NCT00784134.
Source: Neurocritical Care - February 4, 2020 Category: Neurology Source Type: research

Oral Anticoagulants and Antiplatelet Agents in Atrial Fibrillation Patients with Concomitant Critical Limb Ischemia: A nationwide cohort study
ConclusionsDOAC was associated with a significantly lower risk of composite net-clinical-benefit outcome than either warfarin or APT in AF patients with concomitant CLI. Further prospective study is necessary to validate the findings in the future.
Source: Canadian Journal of Cardiology - February 19, 2020 Category: Cardiology Source Type: research

Risk factors for severe bleeding events during warfarin treatment: the influence of sex, age, comorbidity and co-medication
ConclusionMost of the well-established risk factors were found to be significantly associated with bleeding events in our study. We additionally found that women had a lower incidence of bleeding. Potential biases are selection effects, residual confounding and unmeasured frailty.
Source: European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology - March 27, 2020 Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research

Factor Xa inhibitors in patients with continuous-flow left ventricular assist devices
ConclusionsFactor Xa inhibitors may be viable treatment options for CF-LVAD patients for whom warfarin therapy has failed. Large prospective studies are necessary to confirm these results.
Source: General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery - April 26, 2020 Category: Cardiovascular & Thoracic Surgery Source Type: research

Direct oral anticoagulants across the heart failure spectrum: the precision medicine era
AbstractHeart failure (HF) is characterized by a pro-thrombotic state, which might aggravate its morbidity and, consequently, mortality. Several and commonly observed comorbidities, such as coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation (AF), renal dysfunction, and diabetes often complicate HF, increasing the thromboembolic risk. In the past decade, direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) have been approved for the treatment and prevention of stroke and embolic events in patients with nonvalvular AF. Due to their lower bleeding risk, these drugs are frequently used instead of warfarin; however, some controversies exist on their u...
Source: Heart Failure Reviews - June 23, 2020 Category: Cardiology Source Type: research

Thromboembolism, bleeding and vascular death in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation patients with type 2 diabetes receiving rivaroxaban or warfarin
Diabetes increases a patient ’s risk of developing atrial fibrillation by 49%. Patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation are at a fivefold increased risk of stroke and die more frequently from vascular caus...
Source: Cardiovascular Diabetology - February 26, 2021 Category: Cardiology Authors: Craig I. Coleman, Olivia S. Costa, Christopher W. Brescia, Burcu Vardar, Khaled Abdelgawwad and Nitesh Sood Tags: Original investigation Source Type: research

Cardiovascular Pharmacogenomics: An Update on Clinical Studies of Antithrombotic Drugs in Brazilian Patients
AbstractAnticoagulant and antiplatelet drugs effectively prevent thrombotic events in patients with cardiovascular diseases, ischemic stroke, peripheral vascular diseases, and other thromboembolic diseases. However, genetic and non-genetic factors affect the response to antithrombotic therapy and can increase the risk of adverse events. This narrative review discusses pharmacogenomic studies on antithrombotic drugs commonly prescribed in Brazil. Multiple Brazilian studies assessed the impact of pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) gene variants on warfarin response. The reduced function allelesCYP2C9*2 andCYP2C9*3...
Source: Molecular Diagnosis and Therapy - August 6, 2021 Category: Molecular Biology Source Type: research

Net clinical benefit of direct oral anticoagulants in atrial fibrillation patients with or without diabetes mellitus: a meta-analysis of outcome trials
Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are gradually replacing warfarin in the treatment of non-valvular atrial fibrillation because outcome comparison trials were constantly associated with a reduction of 1) stroke or systemic embolism events, and 2) major bleeding events [1 –4]. Whether the beneficial effect of DOACs vs warfarin on fatal and non-fatal outcomes is consistent to patients with or without diabetes mellitus (DM) has been previously approached by meta-analyses of the available outcome trials [5–7], in which no differential outcome effect was noticed.
Source: Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice - November 15, 2021 Category: Endocrinology Authors: Sotirios Drogkaris, Costas Thomopoulos, Theodoros Kalos, Eleni Manta, Costas Tsioufis Source Type: research

Group based trajectory modeling to assess adherence to oral anticoagulants among atrial fibrillation patients with comorbidities: a retrospective study
ConclusionAdherence to oral anticoagulants is suboptimal. Interventions tailored according to past adherence trajectories may be effective in improving patient ’s adherence.
Source: International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy - July 1, 2022 Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research