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Biotech / Medical : MDCO: Medicines Company
MDCO 84.900.0%Jan 6 4:00 PM EST

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To: Mike who wrote (92)7/21/2003 5:21:27 AM
From: Mike  Read Replies (1) of 125
 
More good information coming out!!!
by: retireonme
Long-Term Sentiment: Strong Buy 07/20/03 06:27 pm
Msg: 1772 of 1775

Here is an abstract from an yet unpublished article on Angiomax. Read it and weep mdcopussyboy. Death time for you coming soon if you think Angiomax is going to fail. I like what others are saying about Angiomax.

Retireonme

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 2777673&dopt=Abstract&itool=iconabstr

J Invasive Cardiol. 2003 Jun;15(6):334-42. Related Articles, Links

Bivalirudin as a foundation anticoagulant in peripheral vascular disease: a safe and feasible alternative for renal and iliac interventions.

Allie DE, Lirtzman MD, Wyatt CH, Keller VA, Khan MH, Khan MA, Fail PS, Hebert CJ, Ellis SD, Mitran E, Chaisson G, Stagg S Jr, Allie AA, Walker CM.

Cardiovascular Institute of the South, Lafayette and Houma, LA 70506, USA. David.Allie@cardio.com

BACKGROUND: Many heparin (UFH) limitations are overcome by bivalirudin (Angiomax ). The pharmacokinetic profile of bivalirudin appears well suited for percutaneous peripheral intervention (PPI), yet few data exist regarding its safety and feasibility in this setting. METHODS: One hundred and eighty renal and 75 iliac PPIs performed between May 2001 and June 2002 with bivalirudin as anticoagulation were compared to a historical UFH control. Variables evaluated included thrombotic events, intracranial bleeding, major surgical complications, sheath removal time, vascular access complication, time to ambulate and length of stay (LOS). Follow-up included 6-month renal and iliac duplex ultrasound and ankle-brachial index. RESULTS: Procedural success was achieved in 100% of patients treated with bivalirudin, with no thrombotic events, intracranial bleeding or major surgical complications observed. Procedural success was achieved in 179/180 (99%) renal and 74/75 (98.6%) iliac patients treated with UFH. Significant differences were observed for sheath removal time < 60 minutes (84% versus 59%; p < 0.0001), time to ambulation < 6 hours (75.5% versus 58%; p < 0.0005) and LOS < 24 hours (85.5% versus 72%; p = 0.002) in bivalirudin-treated renal PPI patients versus UFH-treated patients, respectively. Significant differences were also observed in favor of bivalirudin for the iliac PPIs for sheath removal time < 60 minutes (p = 0.012) and time to ambulation < 6 hours (p = 0.039). Following 6-month renal and iliac duplex ultrasound, repeat PPI was required in 7/180 (3.9%) and 9/180 (5%) of renal, and 3/75 (4%) and 4/75 (5.3%) of iliac patients treated with bivalirudin or UFH, respectively. CONCLUSION: Bivalirudin is a safe and feasible alternative anticoagulant in renal and iliac PPI and may offer decreased sheath removal time, time to ambulation and LOS. A larger prospective randomized multicenter trial is warranted.

PMID: 12777673 [PubMed - in process]
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