Recombinant factor VIIa and the patient with neurologic bleeding: separating fact from fiction.
J Neurosci Nurs 2010;
42:229-34. [PMID:
20804119 DOI:
10.1097/jnn.0b013e3181e26ae7]
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Abstract
Notwithstanding its limited Food and Drug Administration-approved indications, rFVIIa has rapidly gained widespread use for the treatment of a variety of hemorrhagic conditions, including intracranial bleeding from spontaneous, traumatic, surgical, and coagulopathic causes. Although it appears that the drug only minimally increases the risk of thromboembolic events, its efficacy remains in question. The idea of finding a universal cure for hemorrhage in a medication bottle remains highly appealing, but enthusiasm for the concept is no replacement for evidence. Neuroscience nurses, who are the interface between patients and rFVIIa, need to balance hope and hype until the facts are all in.
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