Veterinary and human toxicology
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Case Reports
Diarrhea-associated over-anticoagulation in a patient taking warfarin: therapeutic role of cholestyramine.
We present a case of significant over-anticoagulation temporally associated with a bout of protracted diarrhea in a patient on warfarin therapy. Cholestyramine was utilized to interrupt the enterohepatic recycling of warfarin and for its antidiarrheal effects to prevent gastrointestinal vitamin K wasting. Cholestyramine enabled the use of very low doses of sc vitamin K1 (2 mg total) with subsequent attainment of a therapeutic International Normalized Ratio in 39 h.
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Ethylene glycol poisoning of companion animals is a common occurrence and is sometimes involved in human intoxication. Ethylene glycol is of limited toxicity, but the metabolites including glycolic acid are responsible for poisoning. Conventional treatment has employed substances to prevent alcohol dehydrogenase from metabolizing the ethylene glycol, but to be effective, therapy must begin within hours of ethylene glycol consumption. We describe a rapid (10 min) analysis of biological fluids for ethylene glycol and glycolic acid using isocratic HPLC, a refractive index detector, and a Waters fast fruit juice analytical column.