Guest guest Posted January 6, 2006 Report Share Posted January 6, 2006 LJ, I am not sure this Dr. Waldo knows what he is talking about. 1. " ...says an accompanying editorial by Dr. Albert L. Waldo, a professor of cardiology and medicine at Case Western Reserve University. One major reason is that warfarin is an extremely difficult drug to manage, he says, because it interacts not only with many other medicines but also with many foods. People who take warfarin can't drink alcohol or eat broccoli, lettuce or other green, leafy vegetables, among other restrictions. " That is NOT TRUE. Most doctors advise to eat all the green veggies you want --- just keep it constant and adjust the warfarin dose, 2. " One reason for those reservations is that any patient taking warfarin must have a blood test every two or three weeks to be sure that the blood-thinning level is low enough to avoid clotting but not so low as to cause dangerous bleeding, Waldo notes. " Exactly the REVERSE. They measure to ensure the level is HIGH enough to avoid clotting. 3. " But there is hope that a new blood thinner now in advanced clinical trials could remove most of those complicating factors, Waldo says. The medication, Exanta, being developed by the AstraZeneca pharmaceutical company, is being used in several large- scale trials involving thousands of patients. Initial reports of those trials have been extremely encouraging, and there is hope that the drug will be put on a fast track for approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to make it available by the end of next year, Waldo says. " I was of the opinion that FDA had PREVENTED any US trials of Exanta in US due to liver toxicity? Sounds like Dr. Waldo needs to " find himself " . , Charlotte NC > > Stroke Risk Eyed in Those With Bad Heart RhythmThursday January 05, 2006 (1340 PST) > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.