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coumadin

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armandde

Junior Member
What is the name of your state? illinois

My question is my father was 85 and died of a subdural hematoma. He had been prescribed coumadin and took it as well as his other prescriptions daily. My sister lived with him over the last year of his life and kept a close eye on him. Because she herself had suffered an injury sometime before she did not work and was with him constantly. In the last few months prior to his death he had been falling down somewhat regulary. Both my sister and I would usually accompany my father to his appointments and would discuss the particular situation. I had been doing this over the last four years for both my father and my mother who had passed away 13 months before. In other words I was very involved. When he died he had sent my sister out do some shopping. Because she doesn't drive these trips can take hours by bus. When my sister got back she found my father on the floor of his room in what would be called in laymens terms as an fit. She tried to wake him but was unable so she called 911. After calling me I drove the 35 minutes and picked her up. When we arrived at the emergency room we were met by to docters. They told us that he had had a head injury that had caused a subdural hematoma. They said that the injury had most likley occured two or more weeks before. The said that they felt that there wasn't anything that they could do but that the larger hospital 35 miles away maybe able to do something. So he was air lifted to Carle Hospital. Again we were met be doctors that told us that there was not anything further that could be done. That his head injury was so pronounced that they would leave him on life support until our brother could arrive. They told us that a bump on the head for an average person not on coumadin would just shake it off. But a person taking coumadin would have comparable outcomes.
What I would like to know is we knew our father was in poor health as did he but it didn't stop us from taking him tha a specialist to see if there were other paths untraveled. He may have been on his last years but he still gardened, he still loved visiting, he still loved seeing his children as we did him. He had just gone fishing with my brother and I. That day an elderly gentelman had flipped his fishing boat in the lake and the three of us helped rescue. He may of been old but he didn't sit and wait to die, and neither did we.
Then simple, why didn't his doctor tell us in any of a similar fashion that the doctors in the emergency room tell us to be aware of any bumps or bruises particulary to the head. Why didn't anyone tell us that this was a possible serious if not fatal injury. And knowing that this is a slow process time wise this could be avoided. Tell me was this our ignorance or the doctor mentality that old people really don't matter.
 
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panzertanker

Senior Member
Narrow that down to a question.
Are you asking should you have been told that a blood thinner was dangerous?
Or that he should not have been on it?
What?
 

rmet4nzkx

Senior Member
I'm sorry for your loss, it sounds like your father lived his life to it's fullest, a blessing in many ways.

Also head injuries have a profile that may make diagnosis and treatment complicated. For example, you can have a head injury and months later have a hemerrhage or a head injury and 20 years later have a seizure from it.

There is a risk with blood thiners from occult head injuries and one cannot always know in advance if there will be a problem. The doctors have to treat according to the greater known risk.
 
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Honey1955

Junior Member
One other point to consider is why he was on coumadin in the first place. I would think he probably had a heart condition of some type. Certain heart conditions (atrial fib, congestive heart failure, previous heart attack) increase the possibility of having clots in the blood. If one of these clots moves to the heart you have a heart attack, if it goes to the brain you have a stroke.
Many times you have to weigh the potential risk of giving a drug versus the risk of not giving it. Without the coumadin he might have already had a fatal stroke or heart attack.
I know this doesn't ease the pain of losing him and I am sorry for your loss. Sometimes no matter how hard you try, bad things happen to good people without it being anyone's fault. It wasn't you or your sister fault either.
 

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