Warfarin for ischemic heart disease.

  • Verheugt, F.W.A.
Publication date
January 2001

Abstract

Oral anticoagulation is one of the oldest ways for preventing secondary ischemic heart disease. With the introduction of aspirin, and low-dose aspirin in particular, the interest in oral anticoagulants has diminished, given the inherent bleeding risk. This short review deals with the efficacy and safety of oral anticoagulation in treating ischemic heart disease compared to placebo and to low-dose aspirin. Also, the comparison of the combination of oral anticoagulants and aspirin to aspirin alone is made. After myocardial infarction, oral anticoagulation is far superior to placebo in preventing recurrent ischemic events, with a risk of major bleeding of 1 per 100 patient-years. Oral anticoagulation seems equivalent to aspirin after myocardia...

Extracted data

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