Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido

Antiphospholipid syndrome is very heterogeneous and is therefore of interest to various medical specialties. The neurologist will see it in cases of ischemic cerebrovascular disease. Retrospective clinical series suggest that treatment with high levels of anticoagulants (INR of 3 to 4.5), rather than at the usual levels (INR 2 to 3), decreases its recurrence. Crowther et al. published in the New England Journal of Medicine (2003; 349: 1133-8), the first prospective, randomized study evaluating the effectiveness and safety of oral anticoagulation at the two levels mentioned to prevent the recurrence of cerebral thrombosis. The authors conclude that a high-level use of anticoagulants does not give better results than a moderate-level use (INR 2 to 3). These results are crucial for neurologists, since the most serious complication arising from the use of anticoagulants is intracranial hemorrhage, whose primary risk factors are the level of anticoagulation and previous infarction. This study allows us to manage ischemic events in antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, with usual levels of anticoagulation

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Main Author: Tapia,Jorge
Format: Digital revista
Language:Spanish / Castilian
Published: Sociedad de Neurología, Psiquiatría y Neurocirugía 2003
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-92272003000400007
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spelling oai:scielo:S0717-922720030004000072004-01-29Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípidoTapia,Jorge trombosis prevention antiphospholipid syndrome treatment Antiphospholipid syndrome is very heterogeneous and is therefore of interest to various medical specialties. The neurologist will see it in cases of ischemic cerebrovascular disease. Retrospective clinical series suggest that treatment with high levels of anticoagulants (INR of 3 to 4.5), rather than at the usual levels (INR 2 to 3), decreases its recurrence. Crowther et al. published in the New England Journal of Medicine (2003; 349: 1133-8), the first prospective, randomized study evaluating the effectiveness and safety of oral anticoagulation at the two levels mentioned to prevent the recurrence of cerebral thrombosis. The authors conclude that a high-level use of anticoagulants does not give better results than a moderate-level use (INR 2 to 3). These results are crucial for neurologists, since the most serious complication arising from the use of anticoagulants is intracranial hemorrhage, whose primary risk factors are the level of anticoagulation and previous infarction. This study allows us to manage ischemic events in antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, with usual levels of anticoagulationinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad de Neurología, Psiquiatría y NeurocirugíaRevista chilena de neuro-psiquiatría v.41 n.4 20032003-10-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-92272003000400007es10.4067/S0717-92272003000400007
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-cl
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language Spanish / Castilian
format Digital
author Tapia,Jorge
spellingShingle Tapia,Jorge
Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido
author_facet Tapia,Jorge
author_sort Tapia,Jorge
title Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido
title_short Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido
title_full Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido
title_fullStr Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido
title_full_unstemmed Prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido
title_sort prevención secundaria de la trombosis en pacientes con síndrome antifosfolípido
description Antiphospholipid syndrome is very heterogeneous and is therefore of interest to various medical specialties. The neurologist will see it in cases of ischemic cerebrovascular disease. Retrospective clinical series suggest that treatment with high levels of anticoagulants (INR of 3 to 4.5), rather than at the usual levels (INR 2 to 3), decreases its recurrence. Crowther et al. published in the New England Journal of Medicine (2003; 349: 1133-8), the first prospective, randomized study evaluating the effectiveness and safety of oral anticoagulation at the two levels mentioned to prevent the recurrence of cerebral thrombosis. The authors conclude that a high-level use of anticoagulants does not give better results than a moderate-level use (INR 2 to 3). These results are crucial for neurologists, since the most serious complication arising from the use of anticoagulants is intracranial hemorrhage, whose primary risk factors are the level of anticoagulation and previous infarction. This study allows us to manage ischemic events in antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, with usual levels of anticoagulation
publisher Sociedad de Neurología, Psiquiatría y Neurocirugía
publishDate 2003
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-92272003000400007
work_keys_str_mv AT tapiajorge prevencionsecundariadelatrombosisenpacientesconsindromeantifosfolipido
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