You'll really have to see if your doctor agrees with this research. I know when I got a weekend pass after one month in the hospital, I mentioned to a nurse that I was going to watch a whitewater slalom race requiring walking down a rocky path to the waters edge. I later was visited by the doctor who very strongly forbade me to go because of the risk of falling and resulting bleeding. I ignored them and had a great time.
http://amjmed.blogspot.com/2012/08/risk-of-falls-and-major-bleeds-in.html
In this prospective cohort,
patients, who were on oral anticoagulants and who had a high risk of falling,
did not have a significantly increased risk of major bleeds. These findings suggest
that falling risk is not a valid reason to avoid oral anticoagulants.
Abstract
Background
The risk of falls is the most commonly cited reason for not providing
oral anticoagulation, although the risk of bleeding associated with
falls on oral anticoagulants is still debated. We aimed to evaluate
whether patients on oral anticoagulation with high falls risk have an
increased risk of major bleeding.
Methods
We prospectively studied consecutive adult medical patients who were
discharged on oral anticoagulants. The outcome was the time to a first
major bleed within a 12-month follow-up period adjusted for age, sex,
alcohol abuse, number of drugs, concomitant treatment with antiplatelet
agents, and history of stroke or transient ischemic attack.
Results
Among the 515 enrolled patients, 35 patients had a first major bleed
during follow-up (incidence rate: 7.5 per 100 patient-years). Overall,
308 patients (59.8%) were at high risk of falls, and these patients had a
nonsignificantly higher crude incidence rate of major bleeding than
patients at low risk of falls (8.0 vs 6.8 per 100 patient-years, P=.64).
In multivariate analysis, a high falls risk was not statistically
significantly associated with the risk of a major bleed (hazard ratio
1.09; 95% confidence interval, 0.54-2.21). Overall, only 3 major bleeds
occurred directly after a fall (incidence rate: 0.6 per 100
patient-years).
Conclusions
In this prospective cohort, patients on oral anticoagulants at high risk
of falls did not have a significantly increased risk of major bleeds.
These findings suggest that being at risk of falls is not a valid reason
to avoid oral anticoagulants in medical patients.
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