Blood Thining Good or Bad for Drawing Blood
1. About warfarin
Warfarin is a type of medicine known as an anticoagulant, or blood thinner.
It makes your blood flow through your veins more easily. This means your blood will be less likely to make a dangerous blood clot.
Warfarin is used to treat people who have had a previous blood clot, such as:
- a blood clot in the leg (deep vein thrombosis, or DVT)
- a blood clot in the lungs (pulmonary embolism)
It's also used to prevent blood clots if you're at high risk of having them in the future.
This includes people with:
- an abnormal heartbeat (atrial fibrillation)
- a replacement or mechanical heart valve
- a blood clotting disorder, such as thrombophilia
- a higher chance of having a blood clot after an operation
Warfarin is only available on prescription. It comes as tablets and as a liquid that you swallow.
NHS coronavirus advice
When taking warfarin, you need to have regular blood tests. It's important to keep having these tests at the times you're advised during coronavirus.
It's also important to tell your doctor straight away if you take warfarin and have tested positive for coronavirus or have coronavirus symptoms.
Updated: 15 October 2020
2. Key facts
- It's usual to take warfarin once a day, normally in the evening.
- The main side effect of warfarin is bleeding more easily than normal, such as having nosebleeds, bleeding gums, heavier periods and bruising. This is most likely to happen in the first few weeks of treatment or if you're unwell.
- You need to have blood tests at least every 12 weeks while you're taking warfarin to make sure your dose is right.
- Expect your warfarin dose to go up or down. This is normal. The dose can depend on lots of different things, including what you eat and drink, what other medicines you're taking, and if you become unwell.
- Always carry your anticoagulant alert card with you. Show it to your doctor or dentist before you have any medical or dental procedures, including vaccinations and routine appointments with the dental hygienist.
3. Who can and can't take warfarin
Warfarin can be taken by adults and children.
Warfarin is not suitable for some people. Tell your doctor if you:
- have had an allergic reaction to warfarin or any other medicines in the past
- are trying to get pregnant or you're already pregnant - warfarin can be harmful to the baby
- have liver or kidney problems
- have had an infection of the lining of your heart known as endocarditis
- have a health problem that causes bleeding (such as a stomach ulcer) or makes you bruise easily
- have high blood pressure
- are taking the herbal remedy St John's wort for depression
4. How and when to take it
Dosage and strength
The usual warfarin dose is 10mg a day for the first 2 days, then between 3mg and 9mg a day after that.
Warfarin tablets come in 4 different strengths. The tablets and the boxes they come in are different colours to make it easier for you to take the right dose.
The strengths and colours are:
- 0.5mg – white tablet
- 1mg – brown tablet
- 3mg – blue tablet
- 5mg – pink tablet
Your dose may be made up of a combination of different coloured tablets.
Warfarin also comes as a liquid, where 1ml is equal to a 1mg (brown) tablet.
Warfarin liquid comes with a plastic syringe to help you measure the right amount.
How to take it
It's very important to take warfarin as your doctor advises. Take it once a day at about the same time.
It's usual to take warfarin in the evening. This is so that if you need to change the dose after a routine blood test, you can do this the same day rather than waiting until the following morning.
Warfarin does not usually upset your stomach, so you can take it whether you have eaten recently or not.
How long to take it for
If you have had a blood clot in your leg or lungs, you'll probably take a short course of warfarin for 6 weeks to 6 months.
If you take warfarin to reduce your risk of having a blood clot in future or because you keep getting blood clots, it's likely your treatment will be for longer than 6 months, maybe even for the rest of your life.
Will my dose go up and down?
Your warfarin dose may change often, especially in the first few weeks of treatment, until your doctor finds the dose that's right for you.
Why do I have blood tests?
The aim of treatment with warfarin is to thin your blood but not stop it clotting completely. Getting this balance right means your dose of warfarin must be carefully monitored.
You'll have a regular blood test called the international normalised ratio (INR). It measures how long it takes your blood to clot. The longer your blood takes to clot, the higher the INR.
Most people taking anticoagulants have a ratio of between 2 and 3.5. This means their blood takes 2 to 3.5 times longer to clot than usual.
The dose of warfarin you need depends on your blood test result. If the blood test result has gone up or down, your warfarin dose will be increased or decreased.
You'll have the blood tests at your GP surgery or local hospital's anticoagulant clinic.
If your blood test results are stable, you might only need a blood test once every 8 to 12 weeks. If it's unstable or you have just started on warfarin, you might need to have a blood test every week.
The yellow book and alert card
When you start taking warfarin, you may be given a yellow book about anticoagulants.
This explains your treatment. There's also a section for you to write down and keep a record of your warfarin dose.
It's a good idea to take your yellow book with you to all your warfarin appointments.
You'll also be given an anticoagulant alert card. Carry this with you all the time.
It tells healthcare professionals that you're taking an anticoagulant. This can be useful for them to know in case of a medical emergency.
If you need any medical or dental treatment, show your anticoagulant alert card to the nurse, doctor or dentist beforehand.
This includes before you have vaccinations and routine sessions with the dental hygienist.
Your doctor may advise you to stop taking warfarin or reduce your dose for a short time before your treatment.
If you have lost your alert card or were not given one, ask your doctor or anticoagulant clinic.
What if I forget to take it?
It's important to try to remember to take your warfarin on time.
It's not a problem if you occasionally forget to take a dose at the correct time.
But if you forget often, your blood could be affected – it might become thicker and put you at risk of having a blood clot.
If you miss a dose of warfarin, write it down in your yellow book.
Take the missed dose as soon as you remember.
If you do not remember until the next day, skip the missed dose and take your normal dose at the usual time.
Never take more than 1 dose a day.
If you often forget doses, it may help to set an alarm to remind you.
You could also ask your pharmacist for advice on other ways to help you remember to take your medicine.
If you're worried, contact your anticoagulant clinic or doctor.
What if I take too much?
If you take an extra dose of warfarin, call your anticoagulant clinic straight away.
You may need to change your next dose of warfarin or have a blood test.
If you take more than 1 extra dose of warfarin, you're at risk of serious bleeding.
Urgent advice: Call your doctor or anticoagulant clinic, or go to A&E if:
- you take more than 1 extra dose of warfarin
If you need to go to hospital, take the warfarin packet or leaflet inside it, plus any remaining medicine, with you. If you have a yellow book, take that too.
Find your nearest A&E
5. Bleeding and what to do about it
While warfarin has enormous benefits, the downside is that it can make you bleed more than normal.
This is because while you're taking warfarin, your blood will not clot as easily.
You're more likely to get bleeding problems in the first few weeks of starting warfarin treatment and when you're unwell - for instance, if you have flu, are being sick (vomiting) or have diarrhoea.
Apart from the risk of bleeding, warfarin is a very safe medicine. It's safe to take for a long time, even many years.
Less serious bleeding
It's usual to bleed more easily than normal while you're taking warfarin.
The kind of bleeding you might have includes:
- periods that are heavier and last longer than normal
- bleeding for a little longer than usual if you cut yourself
- occasional nosebleeds (that last for less than 10 minutes)
- bleeding from your gums when you brush your teeth
- bruises that come up more easily and take longer to fade than usual
This type of bleeding is not dangerous and should stop by itself.
If it happens, keep taking the warfarin, but tell your doctor if the bleeding bothers you or does not stop.
Things you can do to help yourself
- Cuts press on the cut for 10 minutes with a clean cloth.
- Nosebleeds – find out how to stop a nosebleed or watch this video on nosebleeds.
- Bleeding gums – if your gums are bleeding, try using a soft toothbrush and waxed dental floss to clean your teeth.
- Bruises – these are harmless, but can be unsightly. It might help to make them fade more quickly if you put an ice pack wrapped in a towel over the bruise for 10 minutes at a time several times a day.
What you can do to prevent bleeding
While you're taking warfarin, be careful when you do activities that might cause an injury or a cut or bruising.
It can help to:
- stop playing contact sports or other activities than can cause a head injury, such as football, rugby, hockey and horse riding
- wear gloves when you use sharp objects like scissors, knives and gardening tools
- stop wet shaving or removing hair with wax - use an electric razor or hair-removing cream instead
- take false teeth (dentures) or retainers out for a few hours a day, if you wear them, to give your gums a rest – do not wear dentures or retainers that do not fit properly
- tell your doctor, dentist or nurse that you take warfarin ahead of having any medical or dental procedures or surgery - that includes vaccinations and routine appointments with the dental hygienist
Serious bleeding
Occasionally, you can have serious bleeding from taking warfarin.
This can be dangerous and needs urgent medical attention.
Urgent advice: Stop taking warfarin and call your doctor or anticoagulant clinic, or go to A&E, now if:
You have
- red pee or black poo
- large bruises or bruises that happen for no reason
- nosebleeds that last longer than 10 minutes
- blood in your vomit or you're coughing up blood
- severe headaches, fits or seizures, changes to your eyesight, numbness or tingling in your arms or legs, or feel very tired, weak or sick – these can be signs of bleeding in your brain
- any bleeding from a cut or injury that will not stop or slow down
These are symptoms of serious bleeding.
If you have serious bleeding, stop taking warfarin.
6. Other side effects
Like all medicines, warfarin can cause side effects, although not everyone gets them.
Common side effects
These side effects are usually mild, but talk to your doctor or pharmacist if these symptoms bother you or do not go away:
- a mild rash
- hair loss
Serious side effects
Call a doctor straight away if you develop any of these serious side effects:
- yellowing of your skin and dark urine - these can be signs of liver problems
- painful and swollen patches on your skin
- severe headaches, fits or seizures, changes to your eyesight, numbness or tingling in your arms or legs, or feeling very tired, weak or sick – these can be signs of bleeding in your brain
Serious allergic reaction
In rare cases, warfarin can cause a serious allergic reaction (anaphylaxis).
These are not all the side effects of warfarin. For a full list, see the leaflet inside your medicines packet.
Information:
You can report any suspected side effect using the Yellow Card safety scheme.
Visit Yellow Card for further information.
7. How to cope with side effects
What to do about:
- a mild rash – it may help to take an antihistamine, which you can buy from a pharmacy. Check with the pharmacist to see what type is suitable for you. If the rash does not go away within a few days, speak to your doctor.
- hair loss – speak to a pharmacist or your doctor if this is bothering you
8. Advice about food and drink
It's very important to keep your diet stable. This means your dose of warfarin is more likely to stay the same.
Any big changes in what you eat or drink can change how your body responds to warfarin.
Speak to your doctor or nurse before changing what you eat - for example, before you go on a diet to lose weight.
Foods containing a lot of vitamin K can interfere with how warfarin works.
These include:
- green leafy vegetables, including broccoli, spinach and lettuce
- chickpeas
- liver
- egg yolks
- wholegrain cereals
- mature cheese and blue cheese
- avocado
- olive oil
It's important that you eat foods containing vitamin K, so rather than leaving them out of your diet, make sure you eat similar amounts of them regularly.
This will mean the level of vitamin K in your blood stays fairly constant and makes it more likely that your INR level stays stable.
Do not drink cranberry juice, grapefruit juice or pomegranate juice while you're taking warfarin. It can increase the blood-thinning effect of your medicine.
9. Pregnancy and breastfeeding
Warfarin is not normally recommended during pregnancy.
It can be harmful to the baby, particularly during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.
Warfarin and breastfeeding
Warfarin is generally safe to take while breastfeeding.
Non-urgent advice: Tell your doctor if you're:
- trying to get pregnant
- pregnant
- breastfeeding
10. Cautions with other medicines
Many medicines and supplements can interfere with warfarin. This can make you more likely to have bleeding.
You might need a blood test to check the other medicine is not affecting how your blood clots.
If you're taking warfarin, tell your doctor before starting to take these medicines:
- medicines for heart problems, such as amiodarone, quinidine and propafenone
- non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like ibuprofen and aspirin
- cholesterol-lowering medicines, such as bezafibrate, gemfibrozil, clofibrate and cholestyramine
- antibiotics, such as erythromycin, co-trimoxazole or norfloxacin
- vitamin K supplements
- miconazole gel for fungal infections like thrush
Taking warfarin with everyday painkillers
It's safe to take paracetamol while you're on warfarin.
But take a lower dose of 1 tablet (500mg) at a time. Do not take more than 4 tablets (4 x 500mg) over a 24-hour period.
Taking more paracetamol than this may make your blood slower at clotting. This puts you at risk of bleeding.
If you're still in pain after taking paracetamol for 3 or 4 days, speak to your pharmacist or doctor.
Do not take aspirin and ibuprofen while you're taking warfarin unless a doctor has said it's OK to. They increase the chance of bleeding.
Mixing warfarin with herbal remedies and supplements
Do not take St John's wort, the herbal remedy for depression, while you're taking warfarin.
It can increase your risk of side effects.
Important: Medicine safety
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you're taking any other medicines, including herbal medicines, vitamins or supplements.
11. Common questions
How does warfarin work?
Warfarin is a type of medicine known as an anticoagulant. It makes your blood clot more slowly.
Blood clotting is a complicated process involving substances called clotting factors.
Clotting factors are made by the liver and help stop bleeding. They work with blood cells called platelets that trigger the clotting process to make sure your blood clots properly.
To make some of the clotting factors, the liver needs a good supply of vitamin K.
Warfarin blocks the liver from using vitamin K to make clotting factors. This thins your blood, so it takes longer to clot.
How long does it take to work?
Warfarin takes about 3 days to build up its blood-thinning effect.
But it can take weeks or even months before you settle on the right dose.
This is because everyone reacts differently to warfarin, so it's usual for the dose to go up and down when you first start taking it.
You will not feel any different while you take warfarin.
The only way to check it's working is to take a blood sample and see how long your blood takes to clot.
What will happen if I stop taking it?
Do not stop taking warfarin without talking to your doctor.
If you stop taking warfarin, the rate at which your blood clots will quickly return to what it was before you started taking it.
This means you may be at an increased risk of serious problems like strokes, heart attacks, DVT or pulmonary embolism.
Are there any other similar medicines?
Warfarin is one of the oldest and most commonly used anticoagulants.
There are newer anticoagulants, such as rivaroxaban, dabigatran, apixaban and edoxaban.
Warfarin does not seem to be any better or worse than newer anticoagulants at treating and preventing blood clots.
But the newer anticoagulants may be more convenient because you do not need to have regular blood tests or be quite as careful about what you eat.
Can I drink alcohol with it?
You can drink alcohol while taking warfarin as long as you stick to the national guidelines of no more than 14 units a week for men and women.
A standard glass of wine (175ml) is 2 units. A pint of lager or beer is usually 2 to 3 units of alcohol.
Drinking heavily, especially binge drinking lots of alcohol in one go, is dangerous while taking warfarin.
The alcohol can increase warfarin's effect and make you more likely to bleed.
Will I need to stop warfarin before surgery?
Because of the risk of bleeding, your dose of warfarin may need to be lowered or stopped a few days before you have an operation.
Tell the doctor that you're taking warfarin.
Can I have a tattoo or piercing?
It's not usually recommended to have a body piercing or tattoo while you're taking warfarin because of the increased risk of bleeding and infection.
If you still want go ahead, talk to your doctor about your specific risks in case you need antibiotics or adjustments to your warfarin dosage.
And let the tattooist or piercer know beforehand that you're taking a blood-thinning medicine.
Will I need to stop warfarin before dental treatment?
You can still go to your dentist as usual. But tell your dentist if you're taking warfarin before you have any treatment, especially if you need to have a tooth out.
You may need to have blood tests before starting treatment to make sure your blood will clot enough to stop any bleeding.
Before taking out a tooth, your dentist will need to know how well your blood is clotting.
This will be checked using the international normalised ratio (INR) test.
Most people do not need to change their warfarin dose.
Can I have vaccinations?
It's safe for you to have vaccinations, but tell the nurse or doctor that you're taking warfarin.
If the vaccine is normally given by injection into the muscle, provided you're up-to-date with your blood tests and the results are within the target range, you can have the injection as normal into muscle.
Or the injection can be given into the layer of fat underneath your skin. This is called a subcutaneous injection.
It might help prevent bruising if you press on the injection site for 10 minutes after the vaccination.
Will it affect my contraception?
Warfarin does not affect any type of contraception, including the combined pill and emergency contraception.
But you should have an INR blood test when you start or stop taking contraception.
This is to check whether your warfarin dose is still at the right level or needs to be changed.
Will it affect my fertility?
There's no firm evidence to suggest that taking warfarin will reduce fertility in either men or women.
But it's not suitable for women who are pregnant or trying to get pregnant. This is because it may harm the baby.
Will it affect my sex life?
There's no evidence that taking warfarin affects your sex life.
Can I take recreational drugs with it?
It's thought that cannabis can affect your blood tests and increase your risk of serious bleeding.
It's not clear how other recreational drugs like cocaine and heroin affect warfarin. They could be potentially dangerous.
Tell your doctor if you think you may take recreational drugs while you're on warfarin.
Can I drive or ride a bike?
Warfarin does not affect your concentration, so you can drive or ride a bike while you're taking it.
Can lifestyle changes help?
You can reduce your risk of having a blood clot by making changes to your lifestyle, such as:
- not smoking
- eating well
- getting exercise
- keeping to a healthy weight, or losing weight if you need to
Blood Thining Good or Bad for Drawing Blood
Source: https://www.nhs.uk/medicines/warfarin/
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