Wednesday, December 11, 2024
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Post-surgery in kids, aspirin preferred to prevent blood clots

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The findings of a new study suggest that aspirin should be favoured over warfarin in order to prevent blood clotting in children who undergo a surgery that replumbs their hearts.
The research, led by the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI) and published in The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, will have implications for clinicians when prescribing blood-thinning medications after Fontan surgery, a complex congenital heart disease operation redirecting blood flow from the lower body to the lungs.
The Fontan procedure is offered to children born with severe heart defects, allowing the child to live with just one pumping heart chamber instead of two.
MCRI Dr Chantal Attard said although the operation couldn’t completely ‘fix’ the heart, most were able to live well into adulthood and have relatively normal lives. But she said those who have the procedure were at an increased risk for blood clots.
“Blood clots are dangerous because they can cause the heart to fail or lead to a stroke.
For this reason, all patients are given blood-thinning medications, with warfarin and aspirin the most common,” she said.
“Warfarin can be affected by food, other medications and illness, so patients must have regular blood tests to check their warfarin levels are safe.”
The study involved 121 patients enrolled in the Australian and New-Zealand Fontan (ANZ) Registry.
It found stroke was common regardless of which medication the patient took. But patients on warfarin had poorer bone mineral density and were at a higher risk of bleeding.
Dr Attard said the research showed for patients who undergo Fontan surgery, and do not have additional blood clotting risk factors, aspirin should be offered over warfarin.
She said given the need for regular INR monitoring of warfarin, a shift to aspirin would also have a cost-benefit to the patient and the healthcare system.
About 70,000 post-Fontan patients are alive today, with this number expected to double within two decades. (ANI)

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