The syndrome of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), with an incidence of 0.2-0.5% in patients exposed to heparin for more than 4 days, is produced by an immune alteration with the formation of antibodies against the heparin platelet factor 4 complex. It presents a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, the most frequent of which are thrombocytopenia, thrombotic arterial-venous phenomena, and cutaneous necrosis. Up to the present, lepiridin, recently suspended, and argatroban (direct thrombin inhibitors) have been the approved medicines normally used in treatment, administered in parenteral form. Dabigatran, a new anticoagulant medicine that is a direct and reversible thrombin inhibitor, could theoretically be a medicine employed in treating HIT. According to the bibliography consulted we are presenting the first case of HIT treated with dabigatran in the medical literature.
Complete outpatient treatment of DVT shows outcomes at least as safe as inpatient treatment, adding additional reductions in costs for the Health System.
The syndrome of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), with an incidence of 0.2-0.5% in patients exposed to heparin for more than 4 days, is produced by an immune alteration with the formation of antibodies against the heparin platelet factor 4 complex. It presents a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, the most frequent of which are thrombocytopenia, thrombotic arterial-venous phenomena, and cutaneous necrosis. Up to the present, lepiridin, recently suspended, and argatroban (direct thrombin inhibitors) have been the approved medicines normally used in treatment, administered in parenteral form. Dabigatran, a new anticoagulant medicine that is a direct and reversible thrombin inhibitor, could theoretically be a medicine employed in treating HIT. According to the bibliography consulted we are presenting the first case of HIT treated with dabigatran in the medical literature.
Vertebral osteomyelitis and septic arthritis are pathologies that principally affect people over fifty years old, but their incidence seems to be growing due to the increase of nosocomial bacteraemia associated with intravascular devices and the aging of hospitalised people. The majority of cases are produced by Staphylococcus aureus. We present the case and diagnostic process of a patient with vertebral osteomyelitis caused by another organism, Escherichia coli, with fatal evolution despite adequate treatment.
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