[Use of anti-thrombotic agents--monotherapy or combination and risk of upper gastrointestinal bleedings: a population-based case-control study. Secondary publication]
- PMID: 17484829
[Use of anti-thrombotic agents--monotherapy or combination and risk of upper gastrointestinal bleedings: a population-based case-control study. Secondary publication]
Abstract
The clinical use of anti-thrombotic agents has shifted towards more aggressive therapy and towards regimes with more than one drug. Data on the risk of upper gastrointestinal bleedings (UGB) with combined anti-thrombotic therapy are scarce. In the period 2000 through 2004, 1,443 cases of serious UGB and 57,720 control subjects were identified in Funen County. Anti-thrombotic therapy is becoming increasingly aggressive. Combined anti-thrombotic therapy confers particular risk and is associated with high incidence rates of GI bleeding.
Republished from
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Use of single and combined antithrombotic therapy and risk of serious upper gastrointestinal bleeding: population based case-control study.BMJ. 2006 Oct 7;333(7571):726. doi: 10.1136/bmj.38947.697558.AE. Epub 2006 Sep 19. BMJ. 2006. PMID: 16984924 Free PMC article.
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