Sol,
Thanks for the post.
Coumadin is a medicine that causes thinning of the blood by interfereing with the
normalNormal saline flush mechanisms that cause a
clotBlood clots to form. When you injure yourself, these natural mechanism are what cause arrest in bleeding. Unfortunatelty, the downside of coumadin is an increase in bleeding due to this fact.
I generally would advise against contact sports for most on coumadin as it can increase the risk of internal/external bleeding associated with trauma. Im not sure about the waxing question, but I believe its fairly traumatic and would at minimum probably be associated with excessive bruising. When the INR is too high the risk of bleeding is increased.
Hope this is a start. Many people in the forum are on coumadin and might be able to guide you on how they have successfully adjusted to taking coumadin.
good luck
I test myself at home - ProTime Machine. I test once a week. I would not feel comfortable going any longer without getting tested.
There is a web site that has many patients who take warfarin/coumadin and there is even one forum titled "active lifestyles" - there are many people who are active that might be helpful. The web site is: http://www.valvereplacement.com/forums
Best Wishes and my advice: don't worry - you'll get the hang of it - just be patient, consistent in life and test often. My doseage changes almost every 3 mos. Its not as bad as it sounds. It becomes a way of life and you don't even think about it after awhile. :-)
Konopka
Oh, then he had a surprise brain stem hemorrhage. No signs, no symptoms of headache or neck ache. Then WHAM. Violent vomiting, loss of bowel control-someone happened upon him in a deserted country church parking lot and called me & I knew it was bad from the pin-point pupils & altered consciousness. He was flown to St. Louis-Barnes Jewish, with a bp of 240/130, in greatly reduced consciousness,where they reversed the state of his blood with Vitamin K and transfusions of blood products, they drilled a hole in his skull and put in an intra-cranial tube and monitored the pressure that had built up...he was in the ICU for quite a while and actually lived, despite his obesity and age of 72, high plood pressure, a-fib, etc. They admitted that it was probably the coumadin that caused it.
They put in a pacemaker and he went through rehab at another hospital and is back here at home, all his memories and thought processes in tact, he's walking (slight balance deficit) and doing everything he did before!
However, no more coumadin for him! Rat poison...he says.