Wednesday 30 January 2013

Warfarin Time

I have my next appointment with the nurse at the INR clinic next week. Now some of you wonder what INR stands for. Look it up on Wikipedia and you will find various connotations: Institute of Nuclear Research; the currency code for the Indian rupee and the Institute of National Remembrance to name but a few. In my world of Pulmonary Hypertension and the rest of the medical world it stands for 'International Normalised Ratio', which is a laboratory test measure of blood coagulation based on prothombin time. In plain language how thick your blood is and how quickly does it clot. Patients with any type of Pulmonary Hypertension are prone to blood clotting, which in itself can be catastrophic to health and life threatening and therefore many of us have to take the drug warfarin, an anti-coagulant drug, and have our INR levels monitored closely. INR levels have to be watched carefully as if your blood is too thin, it can cause internal bleeding and if your blood is too thick it can cause blood clots, both very dangerous conditions.

There are many PH patients who have developed PH because of undiscovered blood clots in their lungs and for them the importance of an INR test is paramount. Many of these PH patients are suitable for a Pulmonary Endarterectomy operation, which is a major high risk operation to clear the blood clots, but if the operation is successful it can lead to improved quality of life and increased life expectancy. Papworth Hospital in Cambridgeshire is currently the only centre in the UK that can offer this surgery. Recently this operation was featured on the 'One Show'. You can find this on YouTube, just google Pulmonary Endarterectomy and the link will come up - the link would not work in my blog unfortunately. It does not always return life to normal though for some patients and they still have PH through residual and distant clots and have to have the general and specialist PH drugs and warfarin to help them. There is more about Pulmonary Hypertension caused by blood clots and the treatment available on the PHA UK website below:

I am not in as much danger as my PH friends who have blood clots, however I am possibly prone to blood clots just by having PH. I have to have an INR measure between 2 and 3 to keep my blood thin enough so it doesn't clot, but not too thin that it poses the danger of internal bleeding. My warfarin dosage is adjusted accordingly to keep me as safe as possible from all the risks involved, hence my regular visits to the INR clinic. This INR range may vary from patient to patient depending on their condition and classification of PH. 

When you are first put on warfarin you are given a full set of instructions about your diet. Basically you need to keep your diet steady as INR levels can be affected by diet, vegetables containing vitamin K and alcohol can cause warfarin to be less effective, so whatever you are used to having, if you change things dramatically than you may put yourself in danger. For example if you have one glass of wine every now and again and then decide to drink two bottles on a Saturday night not only will you get drunk, but your INR will be out of range. Decide to have spinach for your breakfast, lunch and dinner, when you only usually have it once or twice a week, then you will put yourself in danger and drinking cranberry juice is a no no! Warfarin doesn't really inhibit your diet though once you get used to it, it is the usual thing, eat a well balanced and steady diet and all should be reasonably fine. Warfarin can also interact with other medicines, so any doctors and pharmacists that you deal with need to aware you are on it. 

I am prescribed warfarin in packets of half mg, 1mg, 3mg and 5mg and as the dose is adjusted now and again I can just make up the new dosage with this assortment I have in stock. They are colour coded so that you don't mix them up incorrectly and get them confused and accidently overdose. 

I am really grateful and lucky that I have my INR tests at my local doctor's surgery, which is just a few hundred metres away from my house. When I first started on warfarin, I had to go to my local hospital for the blood test and the pathology department was always packed and there was usually at least two  hours to wait if not longer. I obviously had to pay expensive car parking charges and needed someone to drive me and accompany me. At the time I had to do this, the hospital was undergoing refurbishment, which meant a long uphill walk from a temporary car park. This was also when my PH was at its worst and I was struggling to walk and passing out regularly. 

Many of my PH friends have to endure the struggle to and from the hospital though and have different people attending them each time they go. It seems a post code lottery as to how the system works in different parts of the country and how much very sick people are forced to endure all in the name of a blood test.  My late father, who had end stage heart and lung failure, was on permanent 24 hour oxygen to breathe and was confined to a downstairs room for the last year of his life, had to endure going to hospital every week for his INR check. He had to wait about two hours each time for the 'always late' ambulance to pick him up, wait the hours of waiting for the blood test and then wait hours again for an ambulance to take him back. Having to go through all that each week absolutely beggars belief when all it takes is a prick of your finger and a drop of blood on a slide, why on earth the nurses attending him each week at his home couldn't do it I will never know, my mum could never get a proper answer on that one. So I know I am blessed at the moment when it comes to my INR checks.

Some of my friends have gone to the expense of buying their own INR machines to save them the grind and inconvenience of extra hospital visits, but these are expensive and still need to be used in conjunction with your local warfarin clinic and GP.

So I'm lucky now and I have also had the the same lovely nurse who helps me each time I go, which is another bonus. She says I'm one of her most interesting patients as she has never had a patient with Pulmonary Hypertension before or a patient waiting for a heart and lung transplant. I think I am also about twenty years younger than most of her patients, so she enjoys a laugh and chat! Many of her patients are elderly and usually have blood clots or atrial fibrillation. 

I have to carry a little 'yellow book' and card with me at all times, so that if I ever need emergency medical attention, the medics will know that I am on anti- coagulants. 

I usually have to go every two or three weeks for my INR check, but since I was ill before Christmas, my INR range has been all over the place. First it was too high, meaning I was in danger of internal bleeding, a few days later in hospital it was too low meaning I was in danger of blood clots and then, with good timing and great inconvenience for us Knebworth warfarin patients, Christmas and New Year fell on a Tuesday our clinic day. This meant I would be struggling to get another INR check before Christmas and for the next couple of weeks to make sure I was back in the correct range again. 

My absolutely fantastic warfarin nurse, on getting the message I was in hospital phoned our home and left a message of all the times I would be able to contact her over Christmas to get an INR check done out of the usual clinic times. She only comes to our surgery once a week, but her main job is as a practice nurse in another surgery, in another town; however, she made time to to see me on Christmas Eve when her surgery at her usual doctor's was finished, so I would be safe over the festive period. She goes an extra mile every time and it is wonderful to have such strong support when something is worrying you. Bank holidays are always a big worry when you are seriously ill as that is always the time if something is going to go wrong, it will go wrong! 

Getting used to warfarin was a bit of a shock at first and tiresome, with all the blood tests at hospital and the diet worries, but with all my warfarin nurse's help and support now it's just become part of my natural routine in life.            
     

Just one last fact about warfarin, it is a commonly used rat poison, it was first used as a rodenticide in the 1940's, so if we ever get rats in our household, they better watch out, there are copius amounts of warfarin about! 
    


I would be interested to know what others have to endure with their regular INR checks and whether your stories are good ones like mine or bad like my dad's!


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2 comments:

  1. Kath, a friend has alerted me to your blog. I tried to post a comment on your latest entry but was defeated. I'm trying again here because I'm also on Warfarin. (I'm also on the transplant list at Papworth but I've only been listed for about a month and I'm only waiting for one lung, so I'm a bit better off than you. Two years is a hell of a wait. And I so wish that you would get that call!)
    As for Warfarin, I also had long waits at the anticoagulation clinic of the first hospital my GP sent me to (North Middlesex). As my pulmonologist whom I love dearly and who picked up on my pulmonary embolisms after a dodgy lung function test) is at University College Hospital (It was also she who referred me to Papworth, even though I'm 63 and live alone), I begged and bullied my GP into sending me to the anticoag clinic there. What a difference! We have individual appointments, five minutes apart, go into a private room with two nurses and have our INR tested with the Coaguchecker (I also have considered buying one, but as you say, they are expensive.) Then I'm out, five minutes later. It's AMAZING. I feel so lucky to be able to go there.
    Anyway, I send best wishes and big hugs.
    Marie xxx

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  2. Thank you Sunny, I hope you get your new lung soon, bet wishes to you too xxx

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