Heparins: Difference between revisions

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{{Drugbox
| name = Heparins
| therapeutic = Anticoagulant
| pharmacologic = Heparins and factor Xa inhibitor (fondaparinux)
| onset = IV unfractionated immediate; SubQ enoxaparin within hours.
| halflife = Unfractionated short (titrated by aPTT or anti-Xa); enoxaparin longer (monitoring usually not needed except in renal impairment, obesity, or pregnancy).
| routes = IV, SubQ
| highalert = <span style="color:#b00020;">'''Yes'''</span>
| blackbox = <span style="color:#b00020;">'''Yes'''</span> (see Safety)
| antidote = Protamine sulfate (fully reverses unfractionated heparin, partially reverses low-molecular-weight heparin); no good reversal for fondaparinux.
| pregnancy = Heparins are preferred anticoagulants in pregnancy (do not cross the placenta).
}}
<div style="border-left:4px solid #3f6f5b;background:#f3f6f4;padding:8px 12px;margin-bottom:12px;font-size:0.95em;">
<div style="border-left:4px solid #3f6f5b;background:#f3f6f4;padding:8px 12px;margin-bottom:12px;font-size:0.95em;">
''Nursing pharmacology study reference (NCLEX-style monograph). Numeric values are standard teaching ranges for study and '''must be verified against current manufacturer labeling before clinical use'''. This is educational content, not prescribing guidance.''
''Nursing pharmacology study reference (NCLEX-style monograph). Numeric values are standard teaching ranges for study and '''must be verified against current manufacturer labeling before clinical use'''. This is educational content, not prescribing guidance.''

Latest revision as of 16:09, 17 June 2026

Heparins
Drug monograph · NCLEX study reference
Therapeutic classAnticoagulant
Pharmacologic classHeparins and factor Xa inhibitor (fondaparinux)
Onset / peak / durationIV unfractionated immediate; SubQ enoxaparin within hours.
Half-life / levelUnfractionated short (titrated by aPTT or anti-Xa); enoxaparin longer (monitoring usually not needed except in renal impairment, obesity, or pregnancy).
RoutesIV, SubQ
High-alert (ISMP)Yes
Black box warningYes (see Safety)
Antidote / reversalProtamine sulfate (fully reverses unfractionated heparin, partially reverses low-molecular-weight heparin); no good reversal for fondaparinux.
Pregnancy / lactationHeparins are preferred anticoagulants in pregnancy (do not cross the placenta).

Nursing pharmacology study reference (NCLEX-style monograph). Numeric values are standard teaching ranges for study and must be verified against current manufacturer labeling before clinical use. This is educational content, not prescribing guidance.

Heparins — Anticoagulant; Heparins and factor Xa inhibitor (fondaparinux).

Identification

  • Therapeutic class: Anticoagulant.
  • Pharmacologic class: Heparins and factor Xa inhibitor (fondaparinux).

Pharmacology

  • Mechanism of action: Activate antithrombin to inhibit thrombin and factor Xa (unfractionated affects both; low-molecular-weight heparins and fondaparinux mainly factor Xa).
  • Onset / peak / duration: IV unfractionated immediate; SubQ enoxaparin within hours.
  • Half-life / therapeutic level: Unfractionated short (titrated by aPTT or anti-Xa); enoxaparin longer (monitoring usually not needed except in renal impairment, obesity, or pregnancy).

Clinical use

  • Indications: Venous thromboembolism treatment and prophylaxis, acute coronary syndrome, bridging anticoagulation.
  • Usual dose, route, frequency: Unfractionated IV infusion or SubQ; enoxaparin SubQ once or twice daily by weight.
  • Maximum dose / adjustments: Reduce low-molecular-weight heparins in renal impairment; weight-based dosing.

Safety

  • Contraindications: Active major bleeding, history of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia, severe thrombocytopenia.
  • Black box warning: Low-molecular-weight heparins and fondaparinux carry a boxed warning for spinal or epidural hematoma with neuraxial anesthesia or spinal puncture, which can cause long-term or permanent paralysis.
  • Interactions: Other anticoagulants and antiplatelets and NSAIDs (bleeding).
  • Pregnancy / lactation: Heparins are preferred anticoagulants in pregnancy (do not cross the placenta).
  • High-alert: Yes.

Adverse effects

  • Common side effects: Bruising, injection-site reactions, minor bleeding.
  • Serious effects to report: Major bleeding, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (falling platelets with new clots), spinal hematoma signs.
  • Antidote / reversal: Protamine sulfate (fully reverses unfractionated heparin, partially reverses low-molecular-weight heparin); no good reversal for fondaparinux.

Nursing process

  • Assessment before administration: Baseline CBC and platelets, aPTT (unfractionated), bleeding risk, renal function.
  • Interventions during therapy: Do not aspirate or rub SubQ injections; give enoxaparin in the abdomen and rotate sites; do not expel the air bubble in prefilled syringes; monitor platelets for heparin-induced thrombocytopenia.
  • Monitor: aPTT or anti-Xa (unfractionated), platelets, signs of bleeding, hemoglobin.
  • Evaluation / expected outcome: Therapeutic anticoagulation without bleeding.

Patient teaching

  • Patient teaching: Report bleeding or bruising; rotate self-injection sites; do not rub the site.
  • Notify provider if: Unusual bleeding, black stools, new swelling or clot signs, back pain with weakness.
  • Administration tips: SubQ in the abdomen, do not rub; IV unfractionated requires aPTT monitoring; high-alert double-check.