A few days ago, I had a leg vein ablation that my cardiologist has been pushing me to do for a few years. It was supposed to reduce the pressure in my legs and improve my blood pressure by reducing the pressure in the useless veins in my legs.
It was a 'simple' procedure, and seemed to go well -- until a large hematoma developed. The doctor wrapped the cyst, presumably to stop it from growing - but it didn't stop.
I had continuous bleeding from a needle hole - it bled for two days - and may still start bleeding if I take the pad off (I finally got smart enough to tape it on so it wouldn't slide).
The next day, with the cyst seeming to grow, my doctor told me to go to the hospital, and have them tell him I was there. He actually meant to have them work me up, THEN call him. I told him that I may need Vitamin K (because this thing was bleeding) and maybe have the fluid sucked out. He thought this was a good idea.
In the E.R. they took blood. (Here's where the immaculate deception comes in) - the E.R. doctor told me my INR was 5. 5? I thought that maybe an anticoagulant was used during the ablation, and THIS made my INR climb (but according to my electrocardiologist who did the procedure, it was just saline and lidocaine).
I have a pill dispenser, with daily containers, morning and night. I only take what's in the day or night 'box' for each day. I'm very careful when I fill the box, and double check when I take the pills. I can't think of ANY way that I double dosed or made some other error that drove my INR up. Three days before the procedure, my INR was 2.7, right where I want it. So - how, four days later, was it 5.0?
So - now I have a cyst about the size of a golf ball in my upper thigh. The doctor who read the ultrasound in the hospital called it a 'Baker's Cyst' (Synovial Cyst). It's a pain. I'm seeing the rheumatologist who drained the Baker's Cysts that I had behind my knee a few years ago - maybe he'll be able to relieve some of the pressure.
The Vitamin K at the hospital made my INR drop to 2.9. I haven't taken warfarin since Saturday night. I've pulled the warfarin from my pill box for a few days. Maybe this will help some of the stuff in my cyst to tighten up. Maybe this will assure that my blood leak - which may have already resolved - stays closed.
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I thought that the procedure was so non-invasive that I didn't need to drop my INR. The scheduler who called me three days before the procedure said nothing about reducing my INR. I took my normal dose of warfarin, almost by accident, on the Wednesday and Thursday before the procedure - reflexively - open the lid of the night's dose, take a quick look, then pop them in my mouth - and didn't think about removing the warfarin before I swallowed them.
I told my doctor that I figured I didn't need to discontinue my warfarin because the scheduler didn't ask about INR or warfarin use. He told me that he'll talk to her.
One thing that doctors should do is TEST the INR of any patient on warfarin BEFORE they start a procedure. What does this take? A CoaguChek XS, some strips, and some one use lancets. And, of course, the doctors could probably charge a lot for giving the test and evaluating the results - and for some patients, this would prevent the kind of damage that I'm suffering from.
I really don't know WHY pre-op testing isn't done anyway - it keeps patients out of risk of bad outcomes, it assures the person doing the procedure that - no matter what the patient claims - the INR is low enough to safely do the procedure, and it makes the doctor some extra money for having a tech do a simple finger stick.
It was a 'simple' procedure, and seemed to go well -- until a large hematoma developed. The doctor wrapped the cyst, presumably to stop it from growing - but it didn't stop.
I had continuous bleeding from a needle hole - it bled for two days - and may still start bleeding if I take the pad off (I finally got smart enough to tape it on so it wouldn't slide).
The next day, with the cyst seeming to grow, my doctor told me to go to the hospital, and have them tell him I was there. He actually meant to have them work me up, THEN call him. I told him that I may need Vitamin K (because this thing was bleeding) and maybe have the fluid sucked out. He thought this was a good idea.
In the E.R. they took blood. (Here's where the immaculate deception comes in) - the E.R. doctor told me my INR was 5. 5? I thought that maybe an anticoagulant was used during the ablation, and THIS made my INR climb (but according to my electrocardiologist who did the procedure, it was just saline and lidocaine).
I have a pill dispenser, with daily containers, morning and night. I only take what's in the day or night 'box' for each day. I'm very careful when I fill the box, and double check when I take the pills. I can't think of ANY way that I double dosed or made some other error that drove my INR up. Three days before the procedure, my INR was 2.7, right where I want it. So - how, four days later, was it 5.0?
So - now I have a cyst about the size of a golf ball in my upper thigh. The doctor who read the ultrasound in the hospital called it a 'Baker's Cyst' (Synovial Cyst). It's a pain. I'm seeing the rheumatologist who drained the Baker's Cysts that I had behind my knee a few years ago - maybe he'll be able to relieve some of the pressure.
The Vitamin K at the hospital made my INR drop to 2.9. I haven't taken warfarin since Saturday night. I've pulled the warfarin from my pill box for a few days. Maybe this will help some of the stuff in my cyst to tighten up. Maybe this will assure that my blood leak - which may have already resolved - stays closed.
---
I thought that the procedure was so non-invasive that I didn't need to drop my INR. The scheduler who called me three days before the procedure said nothing about reducing my INR. I took my normal dose of warfarin, almost by accident, on the Wednesday and Thursday before the procedure - reflexively - open the lid of the night's dose, take a quick look, then pop them in my mouth - and didn't think about removing the warfarin before I swallowed them.
I told my doctor that I figured I didn't need to discontinue my warfarin because the scheduler didn't ask about INR or warfarin use. He told me that he'll talk to her.
One thing that doctors should do is TEST the INR of any patient on warfarin BEFORE they start a procedure. What does this take? A CoaguChek XS, some strips, and some one use lancets. And, of course, the doctors could probably charge a lot for giving the test and evaluating the results - and for some patients, this would prevent the kind of damage that I'm suffering from.
I really don't know WHY pre-op testing isn't done anyway - it keeps patients out of risk of bad outcomes, it assures the person doing the procedure that - no matter what the patient claims - the INR is low enough to safely do the procedure, and it makes the doctor some extra money for having a tech do a simple finger stick.