What is the purpose of dual antiplatelet therapy?

Dual antiplatelet therapy (also called DAPT) is a treatment to help stop harmful blood clots from forming. This involves taking 2 types of antiplatelet medicines. One of these medicines is usually ASA (aspirin) and the other is a special type of medicine called a P2Y12 inhibitor.
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Why do we use dual antiplatelet therapy?

1 Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) provides more intense platelet inhibition than single antiplatelet therapy resulting in incremental reductions in the risk of thrombotic events after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or ACS, but it has been associated with an increased risk of major bleeding.
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When do you use dual antiplatelet?

Dual antiplatelet therapy is recommended for an ABCD2 score of 4 or greater. Minor stroke can be identified by a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Stroke Scale score of 3 or less. The risk of recurrence after minor stroke is similar to that after a high-risk TIA.
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What is the use of antiplatelet therapy?

Antiplatelet drugs work to make your platelets less sticky and thereby help prevent blood clots from forming in your arteries. Aspirin is an antiplatelet drug that may be used.
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Why is Dapt needed?

As with other blood-contacting medical devices, thrombosis is the predominant cause of failure after stent implantation. Accordingly, the goal of antithrombotic therapy in general and DAPT in particular is to reduce the risk of cardiovascular events, including stent thrombosis (ST),4,5 a life-threatening emergency.
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Cardiology | Dual Anti Platelet Therapy After a Heart Attack



How do antiplatelets prevent heart attacks?

Antiplatelet drugs can reduce the chance of a heart attack because they prevent abnormal clotting in the arteries by telling platelets not to stick together and form a blood clot.
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How do antiplatelets prevent clot formation?

Antiplatelets keep blood clots from forming by keeping blood platelets from sticking together. Almost everyone with coronary artery disease, including those who have had a heart attack, stent, or CABG, are treated with aspirin. Aspirin can help prevent an ischemic stroke.
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What is the difference between a blood thinner and an antiplatelet?

Anticoagulants, more commonly referred to as “blood thinners,” work by inhibiting the clotting factors. Antiplatelets work by inhibiting the enzymes that cause the platelets to clump together.
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What's the difference between anticoagulants and antiplatelets?

Anticoagulants, such as heparin or warfarin (also called Coumadin), slow down your body's process of making clots. Antiplatelets, such as aspirin and clopidogrel, prevent blood cells called platelets from clumping together to form a clot. Antiplatelets are mainly taken by people who have had a heart attack or stroke.
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Do antiplatelets prevent DVT?

Clinical and experimental evidence suggests that antiplatelet agents can prevent the onset and spread of venous thrombus, minimising the adverse consequences of PE and DVT (Castro 2006).
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Do Antiplatelets lower BP?

Primary Results. The Antiplatelet Trialists' Collaboration meta-analysis of antiplatelet therapy for secondary prevention in patients with elevated blood pressure reported a 4.1 percent absolute reduction in vascular events compared with placebo.
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Why is aspirin and clopidogrel given together?

The combination of clopidogrel and aspirin may lower the risk for major ischemic events among patients with minor ischemic stroke or high-risk transient ischemic attack compared with aspirin alone, according to results of the POINT study.
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Do Antiplatelets cause bleeding?

Use of preoperative antiplatelet drugs is a risk factor for increased perioperative bleeding and blood transfusion. Point-of-care tests can identify patients at high risk for perioperative bleeding and blood transfusion, although these tests have limitations.
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What is a common side effect of antiplatelet medications?

Side effects
  • headaches or dizziness.
  • nausea.
  • diarrhoea or constipation.
  • indigestion (dyspepsia)
  • stomach ache or abdominal pain.
  • nosebleeds.
  • increased bleeding (your blood taking longer to clot – for example, when you cut yourself), or easy bruising.
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Why is it important that clopidogrel and aspirin are given as soon as an acute myocardial event has happened?

Aspirin combined with clopidogrel can effectively reduce the occurrence of re-thrombosis after PCI and improve the recovery of cardiac function after acute operation, moreover the safety is high.
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How does clopidogrel affect platelet count?

Clopidogrel competitively binds the P2Y12 ADP receptor, inhibits platelet activation and might reduce platelet consumption.
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What is the difference between aspirin and clopidogrel?

Aspirin and Plavix (clopidogrel bisulfate) are drugs used to prevent blood clots. Aspirin and Plavix belong to different drug classes. Plavix is an anticoagulant and aspirin is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID).
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Can you have high blood pressure while taking blood thinners?

The results demonstrate that warfarin therapy at conventional doses does not increase systolic blood pressure or pulse pressure in patients with diabetes and hypertension.
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Can I take clopidogrel and atorvastatin at the same time?

The investigators concluded that patients who took atorvastatin and clopidogrel together had almost a 2-fold—increased risk of major adverse events at 30 days compared with patients on clopidogrel alone.
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What are the most common side effects of clopidogrel?

Common side effects

bleeding more easily than normal – nosebleeds, bruising more easily or bleeding that takes longer to stop. diarrhoea. stomach pain. indigestion or heartburn.
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Do Antiplatelets dissolve blood clots?

Anticoagulants and antiplatelet drugs eliminate or reduce the risk of blood clots. They're often called blood thinners, but these medications don't really thin your blood. Instead, they help prevent or break up dangerous blood clots that form in your blood vessels or heart.
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What is the difference between an arterial clot and a venous clot?

There are 2 main types of thrombosis: Venous thrombosis is when the blood clot blocks a vein. Veins carry blood from the body back into the heart. Arterial thrombosis is when the blood clot blocks an artery.
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How can you tell the difference between venous and arterial thrombosis?

Venous thrombosis has been associated with red blood cell and fibrin rich red clot while arterial thrombosis occur on atherosclerotic lesions with active inflammation, and are rich in platelets and give an appearance of white clot. Furthermore certain studies have indicated the role of platelet in Venous thrombosis.
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What are the first signs of a blood clot?

Symptoms of a blood clot include:
  • throbbing or cramping pain, swelling, redness and warmth in a leg or arm.
  • sudden breathlessness, sharp chest pain (may be worse when you breathe in) and a cough or coughing up blood.
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How do doctors check for blood clots in legs?

An ultrasound is the most common diagnostic test for DVT and uses sound waves to create a picture of the arteries and veins in the leg. Doctors also can order a blood test known as the D-dimer test. Computed tomography (CT) scans are typically used to diagnose PE.
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