Hi
ncdrummer;n857643 said:
A full number higher actually.
ok ... that's noticeable but probably not dangerous, I would want to see a trend over 2 weeks before I worried. Antibiotics do influence your Gut Flora and that can in turn change your metabolism and your INR. With respect to big changes however I've seen (SkiGirl here actually) someone go from 3 to 9 by drinking grapefruit juice
http://www.valvereplacement.org/foru...-python-moment
now that is a worrying change. But if you were to go from (say) 2.7 to 3.7 then I wouldn't get worked up about that at all. Personally (meaning if it were me) I'd perhaps reduce
one of my doses by 50% and test again in a week ... but seriously it can be hard to pick that a change is attributed to the antibiotic without really looking into it. Its like saying my cold went away because I took Vitamin C ... it may have just gone away anyway.
For instance here is my 2014 data
you can see some spikes there which are attributed to me trying to fiddle with doses (INR on one scale dose on the other) and you can see that I actually did make it worse (but you know, I had to prove to myself that is what happens when you attempt to fiddle and why conventional wisdom is "steady hand on the tiller". Sometimes you go low and sometimes you go high ... its just how the body is (its not rock steady). You can see I went from (near the end of the year) from 3 to nearly 4 (and 2.7 the week before) with no changes what so ever.
If by conicidence I had taken something (like a new medicine) and had not been so dilligent with my records it would be easy to emotionally associate one with the other.
Stats may be boring in some ways, but when you look at your graphs and your stats you can know what's worrying and what's not.
For instance, here is some data from a large patient clinic study of INR and bleed event, you can see that INR has to go quite above 4 for there to be any noticeable change in events
which is why I would not be worried by moving up a number and why I would prefer to avoid a see saw in INR by adjusting something when there may not be a need. Much of the causes of problems in the past was that people were either measuring insufficiently (like monthly or less) or trying to over manage and causing see saws.