Publication | Closed Access
Aminocaproic Acid Decreases Secondary Hemorrhage After Traumatic Hyphema
93
Citations
14
References
1983
Year
Ocular DiseaseSecondary HemorrhageVascular TraumaOcular PharmacologyVitreous BodyHematologyOral Aminocaproic AcidBrain InjuryHealth SciencesForty-eight PatientsTissue InjuryOphthalmologyTraumatic HyphemaExperimental OphthalmologyHemostasisOrgan InjuryWound HealingMedicineAnesthesiology
Forty-eight patients (49 eyes) had nonperforating traumatic hyphema. Twenty-eight patients (28 eyes with hyphema) received oral aminocaproic acid, an antifibrinolytic agent, in a dosage of 100 mg/kg every four hours for five days, up to a maximum daily dose of 30 g. Twenty patients (21 eyes with hyphema) received placebo in an identical regimen. One eye treated with aminocaproic acid rebled; seven eyes receiving the placebo rebled. The results of this study show a statistically significant reduction in the incidence of secondary hemorrhage in the patients receiving aminocaproic acid.
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