My father is 81. He has recently been diagnosed with a-fib. He has Type II diabetes, successfully controlled with
AvandiaAvandia, peripheral neuropathy in his legs and feet, for which he takes
Neurontin and
UltramUltram
Ultram er without a whole lot of success, and HTN, for which he is on
Tenormin. His IM doctor has put him on
Coumadin and
Cozaar to help treat the a-fib. In my experience as a health care professional, I have always seen people with a-fib being treated with Lanoxin and Coumadin. In addition, I have read that those people with diabetes and PN should not be treated with Beta Blockers. Shouldn't a-fib be treated with an antiarrhythmic, something to control the heart rate, like lanoxin or a calcium channel blocker and a blood thinner? Would it be prudent to have my dad's a-fib managed by a cardiologist rather than his IM doctor, in which I don't have alot of confidence? With the PN, he is more at risk for falls due to the numbness. A cardiologist recently told me that for those people at risk for falls, he likes to use Plavix as opposed to Coumadin. Is that a viable alternative? I know I have alot of concerns and questions...thank you for your time and expertise. Sincerely, Codeblue
I have been on coumadin for 2 years for atrial fib and a prosthetic mitral valve. I have had to hold it for procedures like cardiac cath, surgery etc. Basically, there are little consequences for doing that. Usually I go off for a day or two and then may start Lovenox or Fragmin until the day before the procedure. After the procedure, I start the coumadin again and continue with Lovenox until my INR is therapeutic. At first this all made me a bit anxious but I have had no problem with this approach. The valve is the bigger risk problem I have been told but caution is always a good idea.