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Blood thinners such as Coumadin®/Warfarin help treat many serious illnesses.
However, if not closely monitored by your doctor, they can lead to serious injury or death.
The questions and answers that follow discuss some
of the issues concerning Coumadin®/Warfarin. While the material below addresses
common, nationwide concerns, all legal problems are unique and state and local
laws can significantly modify these procedures. Therefore,
you should not assume that the information below applies to your particular
fact situation or your local law. We strongly urge you to
consult with an attorney licensed to practice in your home state for accurate
advice as it applies to your own particular legal situation.

WHAT IS COUMADIN®?
Coumadin®
is the brand name for sodium warfarin, commonly referred to as
"warfarin." Coumadin®/warfarin is a medicine that is used to treat
certain medical problems usually associated with the heart, blood vessels,
lungs and brain. Many people also refer to Coumadin®/warfarin as a "blood
thinner."
HOW DOES COUMADIN®/WARFARIN WORK ON THE BODY?
This
medicine works on the body’s blood clotting system. The clotting of blood is
very complex. Blood clotting involves a number of chemical reactions that
naturally occur when the body is cut or traumatized. If this did not naturally
occur, we would bleed to death every time we got even a minor cut. The purpose
of these chemical reactions in our bodies is to stop the bleeding that naturally
occurs whenever a part of the body is cut or injured. Coumadin®/warfarin
inhibits a part of one of these chemical reactions (the conversion of Vitamin K
to its active form actually). In doing so, the clotting reaction it inhibits
cannot occur, so the blood takes longer to clot than usual. Therapy using
Coumadin®/warfarin is referred to as “anti-coagulation therapy.”
WHAT MEDICAL CONDITIONS ARE BLOOD THINNER MEDICATIONS USED TO
TREAT?
Blood
thinners, such as Coumadin®/warfarin, need to be prescribed and monitored by a
physician. The most common reasons that blood thinners are prescribed include
heart arrhythmias (especially atrial fibrillation), venous thrombosis (blood
clots in the veins), artificial heart valves (especially mechanical heart
valves), pulmonary embolism (blood clot that traveled to the lung), and some
types of strokes. There are other reasons for a doctor to prescribe
Coumadin®/warfarin.
IS COUMADIN® A SAFE MEDICATION TO TAKE?
Generally,
yes. It helps prevent blood clots after heart-valve replacement, reduces the
risk of stroke and second heart attack, and helps other conditions that involve
patients who are inclined to experience blood clots.However, your doctor must closely regulate the level of the drug
so that complications do not occur. These complications can be serious, life
threatening, and even result in death.
HOW IS ANTI-COAGULATION THERAPY WITH COUMADIN®/WARFARIN
MONITORED?
Therapy
with Coumadin®/warfarin is monitored by a simple blood test. The test is called
the Prothrombin Time, or PT. After the lab derives the correct PT, a
standardizing ratio is calculated to derive a value called the INR
(International Normalization Ratio). The "INR" is the value used to monitor
anti-coagulation therapy. This test is done frequently when anti-coagulation
therapy with Coumadin®/warfarin is first started. Once the proper level of
anti-coagulation is attained (that is, once the blood is “thinned out” enough),
the PT/INR test is ordered less frequently but still regularly (once a week, for
example). Because the smallest changes in diet, infections, etc., can alter the
way that each person metabolizes the medicine itself, even after a patient has
been taking Coumadin® for years, the blood levels still need to be checked
often, usually on a weekly to monthly basis.
WHAT ARE THE PROTHROMBIN TIME TEST (PT) AND INR?
They
are blood tests that measure how long it takes the blood to clot. The patient
gives a sample of blood that is drawn from the vein usually and the specimen is
then sent to the lab for testing. The lab and technician are responsible for
performing these tests properly and then reporting the accurate and correct results
to your doctor. Your physician then makes the appropriate adjustment in your
Coumadin®/warfarin dose (either increases or decreases the dose) to get your
PT/INRs at the proper levels (therapeutic levels) so that the medicine helps,
not harms, you.
WHAT SORT OF COMPLICATIONS CAN OCCUR WITH COUMADIN®/WARFARIN
TREATMENT?
No
complications from Coumadin®/warfarin use should occur if the doctor is giving
the medicine properly and the lab is performing the PT/INR properly, and then
conveying the results to your doctor in a timely manner. This is a safe
medicine when prescribed and monitored appropriately by the doctor.
Unfortunately, complications from therapy can and do occur resulting in patient
injury and death.
If the patient is not monitored correctly, and the
PT/INR are too low (not anti-coagulated enough), the medicine will not work,
and a problem from the underlying medical condition supposedly being treated
will occur. For example, in atrial fibrillation (where the heart does not beat
properly), a blood clot can form and then travel to the brain causing a stroke,
and/or permanent brain damage if the levels are not proper.
Yet when the PT/INR are too high/prolonged (overly
anti-coagulated), bleeding spontaneously or after a minor injury may occur,
such as while shaving or brushing your teeth. The bleeding may be life
threatening. Bleeding internally into vital organs or the internal body cavity
can occur and result in permanent injury or death. There have even been
instances of laboratory blood tests being done incorrectly, so that the drug
doses have been miscalculated and patients have been injured and others have
died.
HOW DOES MY ATTORNEY GET PAID?
Most
attorneys review potential malpractice cases on a contingent or percentage fee
basis. This means that the attorney's fee will be usually a percentage of the amount
recovered on your behalf. If there is no recovery, then you will usually not owe any
fee to the attorney. Most attorneys will even advance the expenses needed to
bring the case to trial, and then get reimbursed for those expenses from the
recovery. All of these details regarding the fee and cost arrangements should
be worked out with your attorney in advance, before any work is done on the
case. You should review all of these details completely with the attorney and
have the fee arrangements put into writing.
DESSEN, MOSES & ROSSITTO is happy to
assist you in any legal matter that involves either Pennsylvania or New Jersey,
the two states in which our attorneys routinely practice. If you or a loved one
has suffered from this medication in any way, we may be able to help you. If
you wish to contact us for more information concerning this field of law or any
other in which we practice, please send us an E-mail message and
we will be happy to try to assist you. |