* Tranexamic Acid Tamponade to Control Postoperative Surgical Hemorrhage.
- When preparing for oral surgery, patients taking anticoagulants usually should not discontinue their medication because of the risk of a thromboembolic event. The therapeutic effect of many anticoagulants is not readily measured, so preoperatively, the surgeon cannot know the true risk for postoperative hemorrhage. The risk of a thromboembolic event usually outweighs the concerns of controlling postoperative hemorrhage. Hemophilia patients are also at risk for postoperative bleeding. Single extractions probably do not pose a serious risk for postoperative hemorrhage. However, when a mucogingival flap is raised in these patients, there may be prolonged bleeding. Surgical sponges saturated with aqueous tranexamic acid solution and compressed onto the bleeding site with biting pressure may stop bleeding. Bleeding was stopped in the case example presented here after three 10-minute compressions over 30 minutes in a patient taking aspirin and clopidogrel for a previous thromboembolic event and a metal coronary stent. The clot formed is very fragile and is prone to bleeding, so it should not be disturbed. This technique needs to be studied for efficacy.
=>1.その場所で, そこに(で), そこへ, 2.〜がある, その場所で
Overview of noun there
The noun there has 1 sense (no senses from tagged texts)
1. there -- (a location other than here; that place; "you can take it from there")
Overview of adv there
The adv there has 3 senses (first 3 from tagged texts)
1. (181) there, at that place, in that location -- (in or at that place; "they have lived there for
years"; "it's not there"; "that man there")
2. (6) there, in that respect, on that point -- (in that matter; "I agree with you there")
3. (2) there, thither -- (to or toward that place; away from the speaker; "go there around noon!")
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