I was puzzled why some people say their INRs go up in the summer. I first thought they should drop, because people are more active -- swimming, traveling, water-skiing, volleyball, baseball -- than in cool weather months. Then I thought -- aha! maybe people are more apt to become dehydrated in the summer because of increased perspiration due to heat, which would cause warfarin to be more concentrated in the bloodstream. We would have to increase our water intake to keep INR level.
Ditto on any INR increase with alcohol consumption, since alcohol can cause dehydration.
Any thoughts? If I'm barking up the right tree, only after everyone else in the world has figured this out, perdoname.
Ditto on any INR increase with alcohol consumption, since alcohol can cause dehydration.
Any thoughts? If I'm barking up the right tree, only after everyone else in the world has figured this out, perdoname.