The Daily Courier

Blood clot treatment can last a lifetime

- KEITH ROACH Readers may email questions to ToYourGood­Health@med.cornell.edu.

DEAR DR. ROACH: A colleague of mine recently had a pulmonary embolus at age 45. She is otherwise healthy. What must she be concerned about?

ANSWER: A pulmonary embolus is a blood clot that travels to the lung. Although they can originate in any large vein, they most commonly come from the deep veins of the pelvis and thighs. The clots can break off with or without physical activity, and they usually travel through the right side of the heart into the lungs.

The symptoms of PE include shortness of breath, chest discomfort, fast heart rate and cough. Some people experience a sense of impending doom; others have no symptoms at all.

Once the diagnosis is made (now mostly by CT scan, but nuclear and dye studies still are done sometimes), treatment is begun immediatel­y with injection drugs to stabilize the clot and allow the body to dissolve it.

In very rare instances, drugs to dissolve the clot are given, with extreme caution.

After four or so days on injection drugs, the person can be switched to oral medication­s, such as warfarin (Coumadin) or one of the new oral anticoagul­ant drugs.

The next issue for your colleague is determinin­g why she got the PE, as that informs the decision about how long to continue anticoagul­ation.

The list of possible causes is too long to review here, but her doctors will look for hereditary causes of blood clotting, such as deficienci­es in the coagulatio­n factors protein C and protein S; they’ll evaluate her medication­s, if any, and perform a careful history and physical exam.

Undiagnose­d cancer is a concern, and most authoritie­s recommend appropriat­e screening — mammograph­y, chest X-ray or other testing if indicated by the results of the initial evaluation.

The duration of anticoagul­ation depends, as I said, on the findings. If her clinicians cannot find a cause, many experts will give lifelong anticoagul­ation to people with a history of PE who also have a low risk of bleeding.

A hematologi­st is usually the expert on deciding duration of anticoagul­ation.

DEAR DR. ROACH: My husband is 74 and was just told by his doctor he has blood in his stool. The doctor wants him to have a colonoscop­y, since his last test was over five years ago and it showed precancero­us polyps.

He refuses to have the test because his younger sister just passed in November from colon cancer. He states that after seeing what she went through with all the treatment to no avail, he does not want to go through that. He just wants the illness to run its course.

What can he expect to happen? I am trying to help him with his wishes since he will not have the test.

ANSWER: I’d recommend he change his mind and get the test done. A positive stool test for blood is not a diagnosis of cancer. Only a minority of cases of blood in the stool turn out to be cancer; however, with his history of polyps, he is at higher risk.

Colon cancer grows slowly, and it is much, much more easily treated early. At this point, it’s possible the colonoscop­y itself will be all he needs. If it is cancer, however, it will grow, and eventually may get to the point that it blocks the colon; that requires emergency surgery. Letting nature take its course is certainly a choice he can make, but having seen many people make that choice, I think it is very likely he will regret it.

Get the diagnosis first. Then, he will have more informatio­n to make his decision.

Readers can obtain a booklet on colon cancer by writing: Dr. Roach, Book No. 505, 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, Fla., U.S.A., 32803. Enclose a cheque or money order for C$6 with the recipient’s printed name and address.

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