Unstable angina
Heparin sodium is indicated for:
Atrial fibrillation with embolization:
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- Treatment of acute and chronic consumption coagulopathies (disseminated intravascular coagulation);
- Prevention of clotting in arterial and heart surgery;
- Anticoagulant therapy in prophylaxis and treatment of venous thrombosis and its extension;
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Heparin sodium is indicated for:
Atrial fibrillation with embolization:
- Treatment of acute and chronic consumption coagulopathies (disseminated intravascular coagulation);
- Prevention of clotting in arterial and heart surgery;
- Anticoagulant therapy in prophylaxis and treatment of venous thrombosis and its extension;
- (In a low-dose regimen) for prevention of postoperative deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in patients undergoing major abdomino-thoracic surgery or who for other reasons are at risk of developing thromboembolic disease
- Prophylaxis and treatment of pulmonary embolism;
- Prophylaxis and treatment of peripheral arterial embolism.
Bleeding time is usually unaffected by heparin. Clotting time is prolonged by full therapeutic doses of heparin; in most cases, it is not measurably affected by low doses of heparin.
Intravenous-
Prophylaxis of re-occlusion of the coronary arteries following thrombolytic therapy in myocardial infarction
- Adult: 60 U/kg (max: 4,000 U) or a bolus of 5,000 U if streptokinase was used, followed by 12 U/kg/hr (max: 1,000 U/hr) w/ a treatment duration of 48 hr.
Intravenous-
Peripheral arterial embolism, Unstable angina, Venous thromboembolism
- Adult: 75-80 U/kg or 5,000 U (10,000 U in severe pulmonary embolism) IV loading dose followed by 18 U/kg or 1,000-2,000 U/hr continuous infusion. Alternatively, intermittent inj of 5,000-10,000 U 4-6 hrly.
- Child: 50 U/kg loading dose, followed by an infusion of 15-25 U/kg/hr.
- Elderly: Lower dosages may be required.
Subcutaneous-
Prophylaxis of postoperative venous thromboembolism
- Adult: 5,000 U given 2 hr before surgery then 8-12 hrly for 7 days or until the patient is ambulant.
Subcutaneous-
Venous thromboembolism
- Adult: 15,000-20,000 U 12 hrly or 8,000-10,000 U 8 hrly.
- Child: 250 U/kg bid.
- Elderly: Lower dosages may be required.
Nursing Mothers: Due to its large molecular weight, heparin is not likely to be excreted in human milk, and any heparin in milk would not be orally absorbed by a nursing infant. Benzyl alcohol present in maternal serum is likely to cross into human milk and may be orally absorbed by a nursing infant. Exercise caution when administering Heparin Sodium Injection to a nursing mother.
Management: May give protamine sulfate by slow IV infusion over 10 min to treat severe bleeding (1 mg of protamine sulfate neutralises approx 100 U of heparin). Max: 50 mg as a single dose.