Penticton Herald

Getting off blood thinners

- KEITH ROACH

DEAR DR. ROACH: I would like your opinion about staying on blood thinners for the rest of my life. In July 2017, a CT scan showed a small blood clot in my lower-left lung. This was an indirect the result of a grade 3 hamstring pull suffered while jogging. I am now on 20 mg Xarelto daily.

My doctor said that I would need to stay on blood thinners for the rest of my life because in 2010, I had a DVT and blood clots in both lungs as a side effect of birth control pills. (At that time, I took Coumadin for six months.)

I am 63, exercise daily, maintain a 1,200-calorie diet and take no other medication­s. After the current blood clot is reabsorbed into my bloodstrea­m, I want to stop taking Xarelto. Is that advisable, or do I really need to be on this medication for life?

—E.D.

ANSWER: There is not a clear right or wrong answer to your question.

My guess is that if you saw 10 hematologi­sts with expertise in managing people with blood-clotting issues, eight of them would tell you to stay on some kind of anticoagul­ant — both warfarin (Coumadin) and rivaroxaba­n (Xarelto) reduce your body’s ability to make clots — but two would not. There is much room for judgment in medical decision-making, and the patient’s desires need to be factored in. In your case, you could make an argument that both of your clotting events were “provoked,” meaning there was some identifiab­le reason for them.

In the first case, the risk was eliminated by stopping the oral contracept­ives; in the second, it was due to a muscular injury (perhaps you were on bed rest for a period of time afterward, which is a clear risk factor). These factors argue against the necessity for lifelong use.

On the other hand, a history of blood clots means that there is damage to those deep blood vessels. Even though the body partially heals them, you are always at higher risk for developing a clot. Also, a blood clot in the lung (pulmonary embolus) is potentiall­y life-threatenin­g, and two pulmonary emboli is generally an accepted indication for lifelong anticoagul­ation.

I have seen people go to doctor after doctor until they get the opinion they want. That’s a mistake, in my view . Rather, I’d recommend going back to the doctor who has recommende­d the long-term Xarelto and ask what she or he thinks the risks and benefits are.

Keith Roach is asyndicate­d advice columnist and physician.

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