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THE PREOPERATIVE AND POSTOPERATIVE ADMINISTRATION OF VITAMIN K
40
Citations
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References
1939
Year
NutritionPathologySurgeryVitamin KPost-operative CareThrombosisLaboratory HematologyHematologyPostoperative TreatmentClinical ChemistryBleeding DisorderLaboratory MedicineHemorrhagic DiathesisHealth SciencesClinical NutritionMicronutrientsVitamin K AntagonistsCirculating BloodHemostasisCoagulopathyWound HealingAnesthesiaMedicinePostoperative ConsiderationAnesthesiology
Studies on the factors concerned in the production of hemorrhagic diathesis characterizing patients who have jaundice have been discussed in previous papers.<sup>1</sup>Numerous other investigators have demonstrated definitely that cholemic bleeding is caused by a deficiency of prothrombin in the circulating blood and that both this deficiency and the hemorrhagic state associated with it can be corrected by the administration of concentrates containing the fat-soluble antihemorrhagic vitamin K, together with bile salts to insure absorption of the vitamin. The early clinical application of this knowledge concerning vitamin K was begun independently in the United States by Warner and his associates<sup>2</sup>at the University of Iowa and by us, and abroad by Dam and his co-worker<sup>3</sup>in Copenhagen. During the past two years we have continued our observations on this problem, several lines of investigation having been pursued. We have endeavored to determine the reliability of vitamin K
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