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Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feline arterial thromboembolism is a painful disease characterized by acute ischemic necrosis of one or more limbs due to cardiac diseases, hyperthyroidism, or neoplasia. Among others, medical treatment consists of preventing new thrombus formation primarily using heparin products, s...

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Autores principales: Mitropoulou, Athanasia, Hassdenteufel, Esther, Lin, Joanna, Bauer, Natali, Wurtinger, Gabriel, Vollmar, Claudia, Henrich, Estelle, Hildebrandt, Nicolai, Schneider, Matthias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9367538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35953966
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12151977
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author Mitropoulou, Athanasia
Hassdenteufel, Esther
Lin, Joanna
Bauer, Natali
Wurtinger, Gabriel
Vollmar, Claudia
Henrich, Estelle
Hildebrandt, Nicolai
Schneider, Matthias
author_facet Mitropoulou, Athanasia
Hassdenteufel, Esther
Lin, Joanna
Bauer, Natali
Wurtinger, Gabriel
Vollmar, Claudia
Henrich, Estelle
Hildebrandt, Nicolai
Schneider, Matthias
author_sort Mitropoulou, Athanasia
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feline arterial thromboembolism is a painful disease characterized by acute ischemic necrosis of one or more limbs due to cardiac diseases, hyperthyroidism, or neoplasia. Among others, medical treatment consists of preventing new thrombus formation primarily using heparin products, such as enoxaparin. This retrospective study reports clinical data, regain of perfusion, short-term outcome, and complications of 36 affected cats treated with a novel intravenous enoxaparin protocol. Furthermore, we aimed to report monitoring and management of the intravenous enoxaparin treatment for this disease. In our population, visible hemorrhage was rare. The most common causes of death/euthanasia were cardiac instability, acute kidney injury, neurological abnormalities, and limb necrosis. The hospital discharge rate was 47% overall and was significantly different between single limb (83%) and dual limb (29%) thromboembolism. Our study supports the intravenous use of enoxaparin in combination with oral clopidogrel for cats with thromboembolism as an alternative treatment method. ABSTRACT: Induction of a hypocoagulable state is imperative in the treatment of feline arterial thromboembolism. Publications in human medicine report the use of enoxaparin intravenously in selected cases. The aim of our retrospective study was to report the regain of perfusion, short-term outcome, and complications of cats treated with a novel intravenous enoxaparin protocol (1 mg/kg bolus injection followed by 3 mg/kg/day continuous infusion) combined with oral clopidogrel administration. The secondary aim was to report the monitoring of enoxaparin with anti-Xa activity. There were 36 cats included. The probability of reaching limb reperfusion was significantly (p = 0.0148) higher with anti-Xa activity within or above the target range compared to results below the target range (19/21, 90% versus 11/20, 55%). The complications observed were acute kidney injury (15/36, 42%), hemorrhage (2/36, 6%), and neurological signs (6/36, 17%). The most common causes of death/euthanasia were cardiac instability, acute kidney injury, neurological abnormalities, and limb necrosis. The hospital discharge rate was 83% (10/12) for single limb and 29% (7/24) for dual limb thrombosis; the difference was significant (p = 0.0039). The median hospitalization time for the survivors was 119.5 (95–480) h. Our study supports the use of intravenous continuous rate infusion of enoxaparin in combination with oral clopidogrel for cats with aortic thromboembolism. We report similar discharge rates and lower hemorrhage rates than previously reported with thrombolytic treatment.
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spelling pubmed-93675382022-08-12 Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism Mitropoulou, Athanasia Hassdenteufel, Esther Lin, Joanna Bauer, Natali Wurtinger, Gabriel Vollmar, Claudia Henrich, Estelle Hildebrandt, Nicolai Schneider, Matthias Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feline arterial thromboembolism is a painful disease characterized by acute ischemic necrosis of one or more limbs due to cardiac diseases, hyperthyroidism, or neoplasia. Among others, medical treatment consists of preventing new thrombus formation primarily using heparin products, such as enoxaparin. This retrospective study reports clinical data, regain of perfusion, short-term outcome, and complications of 36 affected cats treated with a novel intravenous enoxaparin protocol. Furthermore, we aimed to report monitoring and management of the intravenous enoxaparin treatment for this disease. In our population, visible hemorrhage was rare. The most common causes of death/euthanasia were cardiac instability, acute kidney injury, neurological abnormalities, and limb necrosis. The hospital discharge rate was 47% overall and was significantly different between single limb (83%) and dual limb (29%) thromboembolism. Our study supports the intravenous use of enoxaparin in combination with oral clopidogrel for cats with thromboembolism as an alternative treatment method. ABSTRACT: Induction of a hypocoagulable state is imperative in the treatment of feline arterial thromboembolism. Publications in human medicine report the use of enoxaparin intravenously in selected cases. The aim of our retrospective study was to report the regain of perfusion, short-term outcome, and complications of cats treated with a novel intravenous enoxaparin protocol (1 mg/kg bolus injection followed by 3 mg/kg/day continuous infusion) combined with oral clopidogrel administration. The secondary aim was to report the monitoring of enoxaparin with anti-Xa activity. There were 36 cats included. The probability of reaching limb reperfusion was significantly (p = 0.0148) higher with anti-Xa activity within or above the target range compared to results below the target range (19/21, 90% versus 11/20, 55%). The complications observed were acute kidney injury (15/36, 42%), hemorrhage (2/36, 6%), and neurological signs (6/36, 17%). The most common causes of death/euthanasia were cardiac instability, acute kidney injury, neurological abnormalities, and limb necrosis. The hospital discharge rate was 83% (10/12) for single limb and 29% (7/24) for dual limb thrombosis; the difference was significant (p = 0.0039). The median hospitalization time for the survivors was 119.5 (95–480) h. Our study supports the use of intravenous continuous rate infusion of enoxaparin in combination with oral clopidogrel for cats with aortic thromboembolism. We report similar discharge rates and lower hemorrhage rates than previously reported with thrombolytic treatment. MDPI 2022-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9367538/ /pubmed/35953966 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12151977 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mitropoulou, Athanasia
Hassdenteufel, Esther
Lin, Joanna
Bauer, Natali
Wurtinger, Gabriel
Vollmar, Claudia
Henrich, Estelle
Hildebrandt, Nicolai
Schneider, Matthias
Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism
title Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism
title_full Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism
title_fullStr Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism
title_full_unstemmed Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism
title_short Retrospective Evaluation of Intravenous Enoxaparin Administration in Feline Arterial Thromboembolism
title_sort retrospective evaluation of intravenous enoxaparin administration in feline arterial thromboembolism
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9367538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35953966
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12151977
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