3/ To understand why antibiotics affect bleeding, it is important to recognize that bacterial infections are independently associated with failure to control bleeding in cirrhotic patients with gastrointestinal bleeding.
9/ The above studies suggest that in those with cirrhosis, bacterial infections result in an increased release of heparinoids. Once released, they stick around for longer periods of time.
This may contribute to the increased risk of rebleeding.
Let's look at endothelin-1 next.
10/ Increased endothelin-1 (ET-1) is another factor that might predispose to variceal rebleeding. How?
🔑First, ET-1 levels are increased by bacterial infections.
You are seeing a patient recently diagnosed with heart failure and started on GDMT. You notice that their hemoglobin (HGB) has increased (12 → 13 g/dL) in the intervening weeks.
🤔Which medication is the likely cause of this increase in HGB?
2/12 - An Answer
Empagliflozin
💡All SGLT2 inhibitors have been associated with an increase in hematocrit/hemoglobin soon after initiation.
The average increase is 2.3% in hematocrit and 0.6 g/dL in hemoglobin.
The effect of SGLT2 inhibitors on HCT/HGB has been noted since the very first randomized control trial of dapagliflozin, published in 2010.
Initially, investigators assumed this was related to the diuretic effect of these drugs (i.e., a reduction in plasma volume led to an increase in HCT/HGB).
3/ The mutation in the Factor V gene conferring resistance to activated protein C was detailed the following year by a group in Leiden, The Netherlands.