Monday, January 30, 2017

Common ECG findings and the risk of cardiac arrest



Methods: We cross-linked individuals who had an ECG recording between 2001 and 2011 in primary care with the Danish Cardiac Arrest Register and identified OHCAs of presumed cardiac cause. Multivariable cause-specific Cox regression was used to estimate the association between the ECG abnormalities and OHCA and calculate the absolute 10-year risk of OHCA for men and women with and without known cardiac disease for different age groupings…

Results: A total of 326,227 individuals were included in the study and of those 2,667 suffered an OHCA during a median follow-up of 4 years. The following ECG findings were strongly associated with OHCA: ST-depression without atrial fibrillation (AF), left bundle branch block, and non-specific intraventricular block.


Sunday, January 29, 2017

Saturday, January 28, 2017

Early coronary angiography after out of hospital cardiac arrest


---was associated with improved survival to hospital discharge in this systematic review and meta-analysis. (Poster presentation at AHA 2016).

Friday, January 27, 2017

Real world experience with the Medtronic Reveal monitor


From an abstract presented at the AHA 2016 sessions:

Results: A total of 233 patients were included in the study..The indications for implantation were syncope (37.3%), palpitations (24%), AF management (18%), near syncope (5.2%), cryptogenic stroke (3.9%), bradycardia (3.9%), NSVT (1.7%) and long QT (1.3%). A total of 89 (39%) had a diagnosis made during the follow-up time 8 ±4 months..Diagnoses made were AF 22(24.7%), SVT 17(19%), Sick sinus syndrome 10(11%), symptomatic bradycardia 2 (2%), advanced heart block 4 (4.4%), PVC 4 (4.4%), VT 1(1%), other 29 (32.5%). These diagnoses led to change in medication 19 (21%), office visits 17 (19%), radiofrequency ablation 23 (26%), pacemaker implantation 18 (20%), ICD implantation 4 (4%), and miscellaneous 9 (10%). 24 patients underwent device explantation. A total of 3440 CareLink transmissions occurred during the follow up (mean of 15 transmissions per patient).


Chemical defibrillation with IV potassium



Introduction: Potassium-based cardioplegia is used in the operating theater to induce asystole. This effect is rapidly reversed with wash-out of the potassium resulting in resumption of electrical activity. This retrospective study examined 5 patients with refractory ventricular fibrillation (VF) cardiac arrest who achieved normal sinus rhythm after chemical defibrillation with exogenous KCl or resolution of endogenous hyperkalemia.

Methods: From December 2015 to May 2016, 19 patients were transported to the University of Minnesota in ongoing refractory VF as part of the Minnesota Resuscitation Consortium Advanced Perfusion and Reperfusion Cardiac Life Support Strategy. ECMO was initiated on arrival. Coronary angiography was performed and significant coronary artery disease was treated as necessary. Three patients had continued VF despite multiple shocks and treatment with amiodarone, lidocaine, metoprolol, and propofol. These patients were given KCl 0.5 mEq/kg bolus as salvage therapy after 90-120 minutes of VF. Defibrillation was administered as needed…

Results: Of the 3 patients that received exogenous potassium bolus, 2 achieved sustained ROSC. The third patient suffered recurrent VF after 30 seconds of sinus rhythm and went on to die. One of the 2 patients that achieved ROSC survived to hospital discharge while 1 patient suffered severe anoxic brain injury and died. The average peak potassium level in these 3 patients was 7.2 mmol/L with normalization within 25 minutes. The EKG showed asystole immediately after treatment with spontaneous return of normal sinus rhythm within 10 minutes.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Bag the banana bag in favor of the optimal metabolic cocktail for critically ill alcoholics


From a recent review:

Objective: Patients with a chronic alcohol use disorder presenting to the ICU may be deficient in important vitamins and electrolytes and are often prescribed a “banana bag” as a reflexive standard of therapy. The difficulty of diagnosing Wernicke’s encephalopathy in the critical care setting is reviewed. Furthermore, whether the contents and doses of micronutrients and electrolytes in standard banana bags meet the needs of critically ill patients with an alcohol use disorder is assessed based on available evidence...


Study Selection and Data Extraction: Articles relevant to Wernicke’s encephalopathy, vitamin and electrolyte deficiencies in patients with alcohol use disorders, and alcoholic ketoacidosis were selected...

Data Synthesis: Of these deficiencies, thiamine is the most important for the practicing clinician to assess and prescribe replacement in a timely manner. Based on a pharmacokinetic assessment of thiamine, the banana bag approach likely fails to optimize delivery of thiamine to the central nervous system. Folic acid and magnesium may also merit supplementation although the available data do not allow for as strong a recommendation...

Conclusions: ..for patients with a chronic alcohol use disorder admitted to the ICU with symptoms that may mimic or mask Wernicke’s encephalopathy, we suggest abandoning the banana bag and utilizing the following formula for routine supplementation during the first day of admission: 200–500 mg IV thiamine every 8 hours, 64 mg/kg magnesium sulfate (approximately 4–5 g for most adult patients), and 400–1,000 μg IV folate. If alcoholic ketoacidosis is suspected, dextrose-containing fluids are recommended over normal saline.


Increasing use of advanced therapies, declining mortality in cardiac arrest



Methods: The Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project’s Nationwide Inpatient Sample was utilized to identify a cohort of adults hospitalized with CA, identified through International Classification of Diseases-9 codes…

Results: In-hospital all-cause mortality significantly decreased over the 7-year study period (65.5%, 63.4%, 59.3%, 57.9%, and 57.0%, 56.0%, and 56.3% from 2006-2012). From 2006-2012, there was an overall rise in the use of coronary angiogram (12.8%, 13.0%, 14.7%, 15.0%, 14.3%, 14.7%, and 15.8%), percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) (7.5%, 7.1%, 8.4%, 8.1%, 8.1%, 8.4%, and 8.9%), TH (0.2%, 0.3%, 0.6%, 1.2%, 1.9%, 2.8%, and 3.0%), and ECMO (0.1%, 0.1%, 0.1%, 0.2%, 0.2%, 0.3%, and 0.4%)…

Conclusions: During 2006-2012, a decline in mortality was accompanied by a steady rise in use of advanced therapies, including ECMO, TH, coronary angiogram, and coronary revascularization. Patients of younger age and with CAD were more likely to receive these advanced therapies.

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Your syncope admission: could it be PE?




Background


The prevalence of pulmonary embolism among patients hospitalized for syncope is not well documented, and current guidelines pay little attention to a diagnostic workup for pulmonary embolism in these patients.


Methods


We performed a systematic workup for pulmonary embolism in patients admitted to 11 hospitals in Italy for a first episode of syncope, regardless of whether there were alternative explanations for the syncope. The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism was ruled out in patients who had a low pretest clinical probability, which was defined according to the Wells score, in combination with a negative d-dimer assay. In all other patients, computed tomographic pulmonary angiography or ventilation–perfusion lung scanning was performed. Results


Results
A total of 560 patients (mean age, 76 years) were included in the study. A diagnosis of pulmonary embolism was ruled out in 330 of the 560 patients (58.9%) on the basis of the combination of a low pretest clinical probability of pulmonary embolism and negative d-dimer assay. Among the remaining 230 patients, pulmonary embolism was identified in 97 (42.2%). In the entire cohort, the prevalence of pulmonary embolism was 17.3% (95% confidence interval, 14.2 to 20.5). Evidence of an embolus in a main pulmonary or lobar artery or evidence of perfusion defects larger than 25% of the total area of both lungs was found in 61 patients. Pulmonary embolism was identified in 45 of the 355 patients (12.7%) who had an alternative explanation for syncope and in 52 of the 205 patients (25.4%) who did not.


Conclusions


Pulmonary embolism was identified in nearly one of every six patients hospitalized for a first episode of syncope


But, as pointed out by the blogger at Emergency Medicine Literature of Note, this should not be as shocking as it sounds (and will be spun by the popular media). As pointed out there:


The primary issue here is the almost certain inappropriate generalization of these results to dissimilar clinical settings. During the study period, there were 2,584 patients presenting to the Emergency Department with a final diagnosis of syncope. Of these, 1,867 were deemed to have an obvious or non-serious alternative cause of syncope and were discharged home. Thus, less than a third of ED visits for syncope were admitted, and the admission cohort is quite old – with a median age for admitted patients of 80 (IQR 72-85). There is incomplete descriptive data given regarding their comorbidities, but the authors state admission criteria included “severe coexisting conditions” and “a high probability of cardiac syncope on the basis of the Evaluation of Guidelines in Syncope Study score.” In short, their admission cohort is almost certainly older and more chronically ill than many practice settings.


Then, there are some befuddling features presented that would serve to inflate their overall prevalence estimate. A full 40.2% of those diagnosed with pulmonary embolism had “Clinical signs of deep-vein thrombosis” in their lower extremities, while 45.4% were tachypneic and 33.0% were tachycardic. These clinical features raise important questions regarding the adequacy of the Emergency Department evaluation; if many of these patients with syncope had symptoms suggestive of PE, why wasn’t the diagnosis made in ED? If even only the patients with clinical signs of DVT were evaluated prior to admission, those imaging studies would have had a yield for PE of 65%, and the prevalence number seen in this study would drop from 17.3% to 10.3%. Further evaluation of either patients with tachypnea or tachycardia might have been similarly high-yield, and further reduced the prevalence of PE in admitted patients.


Put another way, it is likely that many of these patients with PE had all the red flags. It has long been known that PE can present with syncope. When it does it tends (in my subjective experience) to be massive or submassive and would likely yield electrocardiographic or echocardiographic clues. Selective use of imaging based on clinical assessment would likely find these patients. So, I tend to agree with the blogger that while this study should not change practice all that much it in all likelihood will.


Saturday, January 14, 2017

Non invasive ventilation for respiratory failure following abdominal surgery


From a recent JAMA paper:

Importance It has not been established whether noninvasive ventilation (NIV) reduces the need for invasive mechanical ventilation in patients who develop hypoxemic acute respiratory failure after abdominal surgery.

Objective To evaluate whether noninvasive ventilation improves outcomes among patients developing hypoxemic acute respiratory failure after abdominal surgery.

Design, Setting, and Participants Multicenter, randomized, parallel-group clinical trial conducted between May 2013 and September 2014 in 20 French intensive care units among 293 patients who had undergone abdominal surgery and developed hypoxemic respiratory failure (partial oxygen pressure less than 60 mm Hg or oxygen saturation [Spo2] less than or equal to 90% when breathing room air or less than 80 mm Hg when breathing 15 L/min of oxygen, plus either [1] a respiratory rate above 30/min or [2] clinical signs suggestive of intense respiratory muscle work and/or labored breathing) if it occurred within 7 days after surgical procedure.

Interventions Patients were randomly assigned to receive standard oxygen therapy (up to 15 L/min to maintain Spo2 of 94% or higher) (n = 145) or NIV delivered via facial mask (inspiratory pressure support level, 5-15 cm H2O; positive end-expiratory pressure, 5-10 cm H2O; fraction of inspired oxygen titrated to maintain Spo2 greater than or equal to 94%) (n = 148).

Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcome was tracheal reintubation for any cause within 7 days of randomization. Secondary outcomes were gas exchange, invasive ventilation–free days at day 30, health care–associated infections, and 90-day mortality.

Results Among the 293 patients (mean age, 63.4 [SD, 13.8] years; n=224 men) included in the intention-to-treat analysis, reintubation occurred in 49 of 148 (33.1%) in the NIV group and in 66 of 145 (45.5%) in the standard oxygen therapy group within+ 7 days after randomization (absolute difference, −12.4%; 95% CI, −23.5% to −1.3%; P = .03). Noninvasive ventilation was associated with significantly more invasive ventilation–free days compared with standard oxygen therapy (25.4 vs 23.2 days; absolute difference, −2.2 days; 95% CI, −0.1 to 4.6 days; P = .04), while fewer patients developed health care–associated infections (43/137 [31.4%] vs 63/128 [49.2%]; absolute difference, −17.8%; 95% CI, −30.2% to −5.4%; P = .003). At 90 days, 22 of 148 patients (14.9%) in the NIV group and 31 of 144 (21.5%) in the standard oxygen therapy group had died (absolute difference, −6.5%; 95% CI, −16.0% to 3.0%; P = .15). There were no significant differences in gas exchange.

Conclusions and Relevance Among patients with hypoxemic respiratory failure following abdominal surgery, use of NIV compared with standard oxygen therapy reduced the risk of tracheal reintubation within 7 days. These findings support use of NIV in this setting.


Friday, January 13, 2017

Noninvasive ventilation in neuromuscular respiratory failure


Surprisingly, it can be useful in neuromuscular respiratory failure of a variety of causes with the notable exception of GBS. From a recent review:

Recent findings: Myasthenic crisis represents the paradigmatic example of the neuromuscular condition that can be best treated with noninvasive ventilation. Timely use of noninvasive ventilation can substantially reduce the duration of ventilatory assistance in these patients. Noninvasive ventilation can also be very helpful after extubation in patients recovering from an acute cause of neuromuscular respiratory failure who have persistent weakness. Noninvasive ventilation can improve quality of survival in patients with advanced motor neuron disorder (such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) and muscular dystrophies, and can avoid intubation when these patients present to the hospital with acute respiratory failure. Attempting noninvasive ventilation is not only typically unsuccessful in patients with Guillain–Barre syndrome, but can also be dangerous in these cases.

Summary: Noninvasive ventilation can be very effective to treat acute respiratory failure caused by myasthenia gravis and to prevent reintubation in other neuromuscular patients, but should be used cautiously for other indications, particularly Guillain–Barre syndrome.

Thursday, January 12, 2017

Negative pressure pulmonary edema


Here is a review in Chest. From the review:


Negative-pressure pulmonary edema (NPPE) or postobstructive pulmonary edema is a well-described cause of acute respiratory failure that occurs after intense inspiratory effort against an obstructed airway, usually from upper airway infection, tumor, or laryngospasm. Patients with NPPE generate very negative airway pressures, which augment transvascular fluid filtration and precipitate interstitial and alveolar edema. Pulmonary edema fluid collected from most patients with NPPE has a low protein concentration, suggesting hydrostatic forces as the primary mechanism for the pathogenesis of NPPE. Supportive care should be directed at relieving the upper airway obstruction by endotracheal intubation or cricothyroidotomy, institution of lung-protective positive-pressure ventilation, and diuresis unless the patient is in shock. Resolution of the pulmonary edema is usually rapid, in part because alveolar fluid clearance mechanisms are intact.


Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Mitral valve prolapse and sudden cardiac death


Here is an interesting case report in the green journal in which a patient presenting in cardiac arrest was found to have mitral valve prolapse (with a flail leaflet) and a markedly prolonged QT. Genetic analysis revealed a novel repolarization prolonging sodium channel mutation as well as a desmoplakin gene mutation of uncertain significance. Of interest, this latter mutation is one of the ones associated with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy.

During the surge of interest in MVPduring the 1980s there was a belief that it was associated with sudden cardiac death but the mechanism was unclear and the purported association has since been disputed. There has also long been suspected an association between MVP and long QT.

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Monday, January 09, 2017

More data on the macrovascular benefit of pioglitazone: pioglitazone after stroke or TIA



Methods
In this multicenter, double-blind trial, we randomly assigned 3876 patients who had had a recent ischemic stroke or TIA to receive either pioglitazone (target dose, 45 mg daily) or placebo. Eligible patients did not have diabetes but were found to have insulin resistance on the basis of a score of more than 3.0 on the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) index. The primary outcome was fatal or nonfatal stroke or myocardial infarction.



Results
By 4.8 years, a primary outcome had occurred in 175 of 1939 patients (9.0%) in the pioglitazone group and in 228 of 1937 (11.8%) in the placebo group (hazard ratio in the pioglitazone group, 0.76; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.62 to 0.93; P=0.007). Diabetes developed in 73 patients (3.8%) and 149 patients (7.7%), respectively (hazard ratio, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.33 to 0.69; P less than 0.001). There was no significant between-group difference in all-cause mortality (hazard ratio, 0.93; 95% CI, 0.73 to 1.17; P=0.52). Pioglitazone was associated with a greater frequency of weight gain exceeding 4.5 kg than was placebo (52.2% vs. 33.7%, P less than 0.001), edema (35.6% vs. 24.9%, P less than 0.001), and bone fracture requiring surgery or hospitalization (5.1% vs. 3.2%, P=0.003).



Conclusions
In this trial involving patients without diabetes who had insulin resistance along with a recent history of ischemic stroke or TIA, the risk of stroke or myocardial infarction was lower among patients who received pioglitazone than among those who received placebo. Pioglitazone was also associated with a lower risk of diabetes but with higher risks of weight gain, edema, and fracture.


Background on the possible macrovascular benefits of pioglitazone here.


Sunday, January 08, 2017

Managing peri-procedural hemorrhage risk


Here is a recent review in Chest.


The abstract lists the procedures considered in the review:


Central venous catheterization, arterial catheterization, paracentesis, thoracentesis, tube thoracostomy, and lumbar puncture constitute a majority of the procedures performed in patients who are hospitalized.


Of particular interest is the controversy around patients with coagulopathy, either inherent or due to anticoagulants. There is no evidence, and no recommendation from the review, to support avoidance of necessary procedures or prophylactic factor replacement except for LP. In the case LP, though the risk of bleeding is very low an abundance of caution is advised based on expert opinion and rationale. From the review:


Given the paucity of data regarding optimal platelet levels for LP and the potential risks of hematoma, consensus guidelines recommend platelet count of 50,000/mL or greater, with clinical judgment guiding practice when platelet counts are between 20,000 and 49,000/mL…


Based on expert opinion and observational data, the recommendations suggest that therapeutic systemic anticoagulation be held prior to spinal anesthesia or LP.


Special considerations apply to NOACs. From the review:


Direct oral anticoagulants, such as inhibitors of thrombin or factor Xa, are increasingly being used in place of vitamin K antagonists. At this time, recommendations for periprocedural management of these medications are based on expert opinion. These recommendations include holding direct oral anticoagulants for a 24-hour window before and after low-risk procedures and 5 days prior to high-risk procedures.

Saturday, January 07, 2017

More evidence favoring lactated ringers over saline



Objectives: To assess the impact of the percentage of fluid infused as Lactated Ringer (%LR) during the first 2 days of ICU admission in hospital mortality and occurrence of acute kidney injury.

Design: Retrospective cohort.

Setting: Analysis of a large public database (Multiparameter Intelligent Monitoring in Intensive Care-II).

Patients: Adult patients with at least 2 days of ICU stay, admission creatinine lower than 5 mg/dL, and that received at least 500 mL of fluid in the first 48 hours.

Interventions: None.

Measurement and Main Results: 10,249 patients were included in mortality analysis and 8,085 were included in the acute kidney injury analysis. For acute kidney injury analysis, we excluded patients achieving acute kidney injury criteria in the first 2 days of ICU stay. Acute kidney injury was defined as stage 2/3 Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes creatinine criteria and was assessed from days 3–7. The effects of %LR in both outcomes were assessed through logistic regression controlling for confounders. Principal component analysis was applied to assess the effect of volume of each fluid type on mortality. Higher %LR was associated with lower mortality and less acute kidney injury. %LR effect increased with total volume of fluid infused. For patients in the fourth quartile of fluid volume (greater than 7 L), the odds ratio for mortality for %LR equal to 75% versus %LR equal to 25% was 0.50 (95% CI, 0.32–0.79; p less than 0.001). Principal component analysis suggested that volume of Lactated Ringer and 0.9% saline infused had opposite effects in outcome, favoring Lactated Ringer.

Conclusions: Higher %LR was associated with reduced hospital mortality and with less acute kidney injury from days 3–7 after ICU admission. The association between %LR and mortality was influenced by the total volume of fluids infused.

It's pretty impressive to me that in cases of large volume resuscitation the mortality for those in whom 75% of the volume was LR was half that of those in whom 25% was LR.



Friday, January 06, 2017

Fluid balance and mortality in sepsis


From a recent study:

Objectives: Excessive fluid therapy in patients with sepsis may be associated with risks that outweigh any benefit. We investigated the possible influence of early fluid balance on outcome in a large international database of ICU patients with sepsis.

Design: Observational cohort study.

Setting: Seven hundred and thirty ICUs in 84 countries.

Patients: All adult patients admitted between May 8 and May 18, 2012, except admissions for routine postoperative surveillance. For this analysis, we included only the 1,808 patients with an admission diagnosis of sepsis. Patients were stratified according to quartiles of cumulative fluid balance 24 hours and 3 days after ICU admission.

Measurements and Main Results: ICU and hospital mortality rates were 27.6% and 37.3%, respectively. The cumulative fluid balance increased from 1,217 mL (-90 to 2,783 mL) in the first 24 hours after ICU admission to 1,794 mL (-951 to 5,108 mL) on day 3 and decreased thereafter. The cumulative fluid intake was similar in survivors and nonsurvivors, but fluid balance was less positive in survivors because of higher fluid output in these patients. Fluid balances became negative after the third ICU day in survivors but remained positive in nonsurvivors. After adjustment for possible confounders in multivariable analysis, the 24-hour cumulative fluid balance was not associated with an increased hazard of 28-day in-hospital death. However, there was a stepwise increase in the hazard of death with higher quartiles of 3-day cumulative fluid balance in the whole population and after stratification according to the presence of septic shock.

Conclusions: In this large cohort of patients with sepsis, higher cumulative fluid balance at day 3 but not in the first 24 hours after ICU admission was independently associated with an increase in the hazard of death.



Thursday, January 05, 2017

Management of coagulopathy in liver diasease


From a recent review:

Conclusions: Dynamic changes to hemostasis occur in patients with hepatic insufficiency. Routine laboratory tests of hemostasis are unable to reflect these changes and should not be used exclusively to evaluate coagulopathy. Newer testing methods are available to provide data on the entire spectrum of clotting but are not validated in acute bleeding. Prohemostatic agents utilized to prevent bleeding should only be considered when the risk of bleeding outweighs the risk of thrombotic complications. Restrictive transfusion strategies may avoid exacerbation of acute bleeding. Prophylaxis against and treatment of thromboembolic events are necessary and should consider patient specific factors.

Wednesday, January 04, 2017

Factors in delays in antibiotic administration in patients with septic shock



Design: In a retrospective cohort of critically ill patients with septic shock.

Setting: Twenty-four ICUs.

Patients: A total of 6,720 patients with septic shock.

Interventions: None.

Measurements and Main Results: Higher Acute Physiology Score (+24 min per 5 Acute Physiology Score points; p less than 0.0001); older age (+16 min per 10 yr; p less than 0.0001); presence of comorbidities (+35 min; p less than 0.0001); hospital length of stay before hypotension: less than 3 days (+50 min; p less than 0.0001), between 3 and 7 days (+121 min; p less than 0.0001), and longer than 7 days (+130 min; p less than 0.0001); and a diagnosis of pneumonia (+45 min; p less than 0.01) were associated with longer times to antimicrobial therapy. Two variables were associated with shorter times to antimicrobial therapy: community-acquired infections (–53 min; p less than 0.001) and higher temperature (–15 min per 1°C; p less than 0.0001). After adjusting for confounders, admissions to academic hospitals (+52 min; p less than 0.05), and transfers from medical wards (medical vs surgical ward admission; +39 min; p less than 0.05) had longer times to antimicrobial therapy. Admissions from the emergency department (emergency department vs surgical ward admission, –47 min; p less than 0.001) had shorter times to antimicrobial therapy.

Conclusions: We identified clinical and organizational factors that can serve as evidence-based targets for future quality-improvement initiatives on antimicrobial timing. The observation that academic hospitals are more likely to delay antimicrobials should be further explored in future trials.

This is important because in septic shock mortality increases with passage of time until antibiotic administration. These results suggest that increased patient complexity drives delay. Deceptive and indolent presentations appear to be associated with delay as evidenced by the finding of shorter times for higher temperatures. For already hospitalized patients, the longer they had been in the hospital the longer the delay. Might complacency regarding patients near the end of their stay drive this? Particularly intriguing is the fact that academic medical centers had longer delays (+52 minutes). I have to wonder if this relates to more restrictive antibiotic policies and layers of approval embedded at such institutions.


Tuesday, January 03, 2017

Managing peri-procedural hemorrhage risk


Here is a recent review in Chest.


The abstract lists the procedures considered in the review:


Central venous catheterization, arterial catheterization, paracentesis, thoracentesis, tube thoracostomy, and lumbar puncture constitute a majority of the procedures performed in patients who are hospitalized.


Of particular interest is the controversy around patients with coagulopathy, either inherent or due to anticoagulants. There is no evidence, and no recommendation from the review, to support avoidance of necessary procedures or prophylactic factor replacement except for LP. In the case LP, though the risk of bleeding is very low an abundance of caution is advised based on expert opinion and rationale.
From the review:


Given the paucity of data regarding optimal platelet levels for LP and the potential risks of hematoma, consensus guidelines recommend platelet count of 50,000/mL or greater, with clinical judgment guiding practice when platelet counts are between 20,000 and 49,000/mL…


Based on expert opinion and observational data, the recommendations suggest that therapeutic systemic anticoagulation be held prior to spinal anesthesia or LP.


Special considerations apply to NOACs. From the review:


Direct oral anticoagulants, such as inhibitors of thrombin or factor Xa, are increasingly being used in place of vitamin K antagonists. At this time, recommendations for periprocedural management of these medications are based on expert opinion. These recommendations include holding direct oral anticoagulants for a 24-hour window before and after low-risk procedures and 5 days prior to high-risk procedures.