TY - JOUR
T1 - Intravenous heparin dosing - Patterns and variations in internists' practices
AU - Reilly, Brendan M.
AU - Raschke, Robert
AU - Srinivas, Sandhya
AU - Nieman, Theresa
PY - 1993/10
Y1 - 1993/10
N2 - Objective: To characterize internists' dosing practices when administering and adjusting intravenous heparin regimens. Design: A survey administered by physician-investigators. Setting: Two community teaching hospitals and one Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Subjects: Sixty-one attending physicians in internal medicine. Measurements: Physicians' choices of therapeutic activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) range, initial heparin bolus, initial infusion dose, and dose/infusion adjustments when APTT levels are <1.2× control (<35 seconds), 1.2-1.5× control (35-45 seconds), 1.5-2.3× control (46-70 seconds), 2.3-3.0× control (71-90 seconds), and >30× control (>90 seconds). Results: Physicians' dosing decisions and therapeutic ranges during heparin treatment varied widely. Responses to nontherapeutic APTT levels had especially high coefficients of variation (0.67 - 0.81). Two groups of physicians, together comprising a majority of all respondents, use mutually exclusive therapeutic ranges (mean 44-56 seconds and 60-83 seconds). These two groups differ significantly in several types of dosing decisions. Conclusion: In the absence of generalizable standard guidelines for intravenous heparin therapy, internists' dosing practices vary widely. Because such practices may impede timely, effective anticoagulation, experimental studies comparing standardized dosing protocols are needed.
AB - Objective: To characterize internists' dosing practices when administering and adjusting intravenous heparin regimens. Design: A survey administered by physician-investigators. Setting: Two community teaching hospitals and one Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Subjects: Sixty-one attending physicians in internal medicine. Measurements: Physicians' choices of therapeutic activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) range, initial heparin bolus, initial infusion dose, and dose/infusion adjustments when APTT levels are <1.2× control (<35 seconds), 1.2-1.5× control (35-45 seconds), 1.5-2.3× control (46-70 seconds), 2.3-3.0× control (71-90 seconds), and >30× control (>90 seconds). Results: Physicians' dosing decisions and therapeutic ranges during heparin treatment varied widely. Responses to nontherapeutic APTT levels had especially high coefficients of variation (0.67 - 0.81). Two groups of physicians, together comprising a majority of all respondents, use mutually exclusive therapeutic ranges (mean 44-56 seconds and 60-83 seconds). These two groups differ significantly in several types of dosing decisions. Conclusion: In the absence of generalizable standard guidelines for intravenous heparin therapy, internists' dosing practices vary widely. Because such practices may impede timely, effective anticoagulation, experimental studies comparing standardized dosing protocols are needed.
KW - anticoagulation
KW - heparin
KW - internists
KW - practice patterns
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U2 - 10.1007/BF02599634
DO - 10.1007/BF02599634
M3 - Article
C2 - 8271085
AN - SCOPUS:0027380830
SN - 0884-8734
VL - 8
SP - 536
EP - 542
JO - Journal of General Internal Medicine
JF - Journal of General Internal Medicine
IS - 10
ER -