Podcasts

Testing for anticoagulant rodenticide | Review with Dr. Garret Pachtinger | VETgirl Veterinary CE Podcasts

In today’s veterinary online podcast, we interview VETgirl’s COO Dr. Garret Pachtinger on some recent veterinary studies about anticoagulant rodenticide (ACR) toxicosis. How should we test for it? Should we run a prothrombin and when? Should we automatically treat with Vitamin K1 therapy? Tune in to find out more!

References:

1. Istvan SA, Marks SL, Murphy LA, et al. Evaluation of a point-of-care anticoagulant rodenticide test for dogsJ Vet Emerg Crit 2014;24(2):168-173.

2. Pachtinger GE, Otto CM, Syring RS. Incidence of prolonged prothrombin time in dogs following gastrointestinal decontamination for acute anticoagulant rodenticide ingestion. J Vet Emerg Crit 2008;18(3):285-291.

 

  1. great podcast, as usual!
    so, if time of ingestion of ACR is unknown (e.g. w/in 24hr), still decontaminate and have come back for PT 48hr later?
    we don’t have an in house PT test, so it takes about 24hr for results to come back from the commercial lab — haven’t had problems w/ it before (although all of them thusfar came back normal); after blood draw for PT test and while waiting for the results to come back the next day, should I start the given patient on a couple of doses of vit. K1 just in case?
    thanks so much,
    Marta

    • If you start the patient on Vitamin K1, there’s no point in having them come back for a PT as it will be normal while they are on the Vitamin K1. Therefore, you MUST commit to giving a full 28-30 days of Vitamin K1 OR testing their PT. Does that help?

Only VETgirl members can leave comments. Sign In or Join VETgirl now!