Main Directory
Articles 2591
CME 2
eCommerce 0
Medical Web Sites Directory 93
Podcasts 94
Web Design and Hosting 2




Can Patients With Liver Cirrhosis Take Warfarin?
Link ID 5745
Title Can Patients With Liver Cirrhosis Take Warfarin?
Url http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/573327?src=rss
Description Can patients with liver cirrhosis who already have a prolonged INR receive warfarin therapy if needed for other indications? If so, how do we assess anticoagulant activity?
Medscape Pharmacists
Category Articles > Cardiology
Keywords
Date May 15, 2008
Contact Name
Email
Write a Review   Add to My Favorite   Refer it to Friend   Report Broken Link  

Average Visitor Rating: 0.00 (out of 5)
Number of ratings: 0 Votes
Visitor Rating

 Other links at Articles > Cardiology
1. VA Diabetes Trial Shows That Intensive Glucose Control Has Little Effect on Cardiovascular Risk
  Patients with less advanced vascular disease may benefit from aggressive glucose lowering. Medscape Medical News
Category:   Articles > Cardiology


2. Impact of Gender and Life Cycle on Triglyceride Levels
  What is the impact of hypertriglyceridemia throughout the female life cycle?
Medscape Family Medicine
Category:   Articles > Cardiology


3. What Your Patients Are Reading: Oral Contraceptives Provide Long-Term Protection Against Ovarian Can
  Studies show that oral contraceptives may protect against ovarian cancer, a Western diet may increase risk for metabolic syndrome, insurance copayments may deter women from getting mammograms, cold medicines can be dangerous to young children, 2 stents for treating myocardial infarction may be equivalent, and gastric banding may lead to remission of type 2 diabetes. Medscape Medical News
Category:   Articles > Cardiology


4. ENHANCE Results Yield Disappointment for Ezetimibe
  The results of the long-awaited and controversial ENHANCE trial, finally announced today, have shown no benefit of the combination of ezetimibe and simvastatin over simvastatin alone. Heartwire
Category:   Articles > Cardiology


5. Valve Replacement Often Best in Low-Flow Aortic Stenosis
  Overall, aortic valve replacement appears to be the treatment of choice in the majority of patients with low-flow/low-gradient aortic stenosis, European researchers report in the April 15th issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. Reuters Health Information
Category:   Articles > Cardiology




Home      New Listings      Hot Listings      Top Rated      Editor Pick      Add a Listing      Update a Listing      Get Rated      Upgrade a Listing
Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional   Valid CSS