Publication | Closed Access
Ethanol Potentiation of Aspirin-Induced Prolongation of the Bleeding Time
169
Citations
11
References
1982
Year
PharmacotherapyThrombosisHematologyBleeding DisorderPlatelet AntagonistAtherosclerosisTemplate Bleeding TimeEthanol PotentiationBleeding TimeVascular BiologyPharmacologyPrimary HemostasisCardiovascular DiseaseBlood PlateletHemostasisCoagulopathyAnesthesiaMedicineAnticoagulantEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
THE template bleeding time is a sensitive and reproducible measure of primary hemostasis. It is influenced by platelet function and vascular tone, as well as by platelet number.1 Usually after a normal subject ingests 325 mg of aspirin the bleeding time is moderately prolonged, reaching its peak of approximately twice base-line values within 12 hours and returning to approximately base-line levels by 24 hours. In two subjects who had taken 325 mg of aspirin we observed a second rise in the bleeding time — at 36 hours after ingestion in one and 60 hours in the other — to levels . . .
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