Title of article
Elevated international normalized ratio in the ED: clinical course and physician adherence to the published recommendations
Author/Authors
Ashish Atreja، نويسنده , , Yaser Abu El-Sameed، نويسنده , , Hani Jneid، نويسنده , , Byron J. Hoogwerf، نويسنده , , William Frank Peacock، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
5
From page
40
To page
44
Abstract
Describe the course of patients with an elevated international normalized ratio (INR) in the emergency department (ED) and determine physiciansʹ adherence with treatment recommendations.
Methods
One-year retrospective review of all ED patients with an INR >5.0.
Results
Ninety-four patients met the entry criteria. Bleeding was present in 28.7% patients. Two thirds of the major bleeding episodes were of gastrointestinal origin. Physiciansʹ adherence decreased as bleeding and INR increased. At the lowest risk, adherence was 66.6%, whereas at the highest risk, it was 36.3%. Two thirds of patients were admitted to the hospital, one fourth were discharged, and 7.4% were observed in an observation unit. Average length of stay was 3.8 days.
Conclusion
Adherence to the recommendations regarding managing elevated INR was suboptimal. There is a need for formal endorsement of recommendations by emergency medicine organizations and development of disposition criteria based on bleeding status and site of bleeding
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Record number
780609
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