Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Tranexamic acid effects on bleeding in dogs with hemoperitoneum
By Sigrist, N et al.·Published in Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde·2018·Department for Small Animals·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effect of tranexamic acid on intra- and postoperative haemorrhage in dogs with surgically treated hemoperitoneum.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with bleeding in the abdomen (hemoperitoneum) underwent surgery, with some receiving a medication called tranexamic acid (TXA) to help control bleeding. While the dogs that received TXA needed more plasma transfusions during surgery, their overall need for red blood cell transfusions and bleeding after surgery was similar to those that did not receive the medication. However, the TXA group showed better blood pressure and fewer dogs in shock 24 hours after surgery. This suggests that while TXA may help with some aspects of surgery, it doesn't reduce the overall need for blood transfusions in these cases.
People also search for: dog hemoperitoneum treatment · tranexamic acid for dogs · dog surgery bleeding management
Abstract
Tranexamic acid (TXA) is an antifibrinolytic drug that is used for uncontrolled bleeding of various origin. This retrospective study investigated the effect of tranexamic acid administration on bleeding tendency in dogs with surgically managed hemoperitoneum. Thirty dogs were treated with (TXA group) and 25 dogs without (CTR group) tranexamic acid prior to surgery. Various parameters (decrease in haematocrit, number of transfusions, shock index and changes in abdominal fluid accumulation) were used for characterization of bleeding tendency and compared between groups. Groups were similar at presentation and prior to surgery. None of the dogs undergoing rotational thromboelastography analysis showed hyperfibrinolysis prior to surgery. Overall transfusion and erythrocyte transfusion requirements as well as bleeding tendency, hospitalisation time and hospital discharge rate were similar between groups. Dogs of the TXA group received significantly more intraoperative plasma transfusions (P=0.013) and showed a higher systolic and mean arterial blood pressure (P=0.002 and 0.050) and lower shock index (P=0.028) with less dogs being in shock (P=0.012) at 24h. In summary, in this study population of dogs with surgically managed spontaneous hemoperitoneum dogs treated with tranexamic acid received more plasma transfusions intraoperatively and showed a lower shock index 24h after presentation. In dogs with surgically treated hemoabdomen tranexamic acid administration prior to surgery does not reduce red blood cell transfusion requirements or postoperative bleeding tendency.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29717984/