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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Early tranexamic acid use to stop bleeding in dogs with haemoabdomen

By Sigrist, N E et al.Ā·Published in Schweizer Archiv fur TierheilkundeĀ·2022Ā·Department of Small AnimalsĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Effect of early administration of tranexamic acid on ongoing haemorrhage in dogs with non-surgically treated haemoabdomen.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with ongoing bleeding in the abdomen (haemoabdomen) were treated with tranexamic acid (TXA), a medication that helps stop bleeding, to see if it would improve their condition. Out of 48 dogs, 28 received TXA shortly after diagnosis, while the others did not. Despite the treatment, there was no significant difference in bleeding outcomes between the two groups, and both had similar needs for blood transfusions. The study suggests that other factors, rather than just the TXA, were likely responsible for stopping the bleeding in most cases.

People also search for: dog bleeding in abdomen treatment Ā· tranexamic acid for dogs Ā· haemoabdomen in dogs symptoms

Abstract

Tranexamic acid (TXA) is an antifibrinolytic drug used for the prophylaxis and treatment of haemorrhage of various origin. This retrospective study investigated the effect of TXA on ongoing bleeding in dogs with nonsurgically treated haemoabdomen. The study population consisted of 48 dogs treated in the period 2009-2020 at the Small Animal Clinic of the Vetsuisse Faculty of Zurich. Twenty-eight of 48 dogs were treated with 20 mg/kg TXA IV within 3h of diagnosis of haemoabdomen. Dogs treated with and without TXA were monitored over 48 hours for signs of ongoing haemorrhage. Ongoing haemorrhage was defined as an increase in abdominal fluid accumulation, a decrease in haematocrit of >5% over time or need for surgical exploration after at least 12 hours of medical treatment. Transfusion requirements, cumulative amount of fluid therapy, heart rate, respiratory rate, temperature, systolic and mean arterial pressure, estimate of abdominal fluid identified by FAST analysis, venous haematocrit, abdominal haematocrit, serum albumin, serum lactate and thrombocyte count were extracted from patient records at 6, 12, 24 and 48 hours after diagnosis of haemoabdomen. Groups were comparable at presentation, however dogs of the TXA group showed a significantly lower abdominal haematocrit at presentation (37 vs 45%, P=0,034) and a higher fluid accumulation (P=0,019), both persisting over time. None of the outcome parameters for ongoing haemorrhage was significantly different between groups. Transfusion requirement was low and similar in both groups. Of interest, none of the 16 dogs undergoing thromboelastometry showed hyperfibrinolysis at presentation. We conclude that other mechanisms than antifibrinolytic therapy was responsible for cessation of bleeding in the majority of patients.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35652254/