Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction

Perioperative transient ischemic attack caused by the cessation of warfarin.

[locked-in syndrome]

This paper describes the circumstances of a patient who had been receiving long-term warfarin treatment, but ceased it prior to surgical operation, sustained a transient ischemic heart attack post-operatively, which eventuated in delayed extubation and locked-in syndrome. For patients at low risk of perioperative bleeding, anticoagulation with oral vitamin K antagonist can probably be able to maintain the therapeutic range (INR 2.0) extreme. For patients with a high risk of bleeding, the international normalized ratio (INR) should be kept 1.5. Within this range, patients at low risk of thrombosis can discontinue warfarin treatment for 2-5 days pre-operatively; patients at high risk for thrombosis can stop warfarin but should probably be treated with intravenous or subcutaneous heparin when the INR is subtherapeutic.

Diseases presenting "transient ischemic heart attack" symptom

  • locked-in syndrome

You can validate or delete this automatically detected symptom