The Effect of Body Weight and Body Surface Area Correction on the Distribution of the ACT Response to Bolus Doses of Heparin for PTCA.
1998
: Considerable controversy exists as to the appropriate dosing of heparin for PTCA. We retrospectively reviewed records of 335 patients undergoing PTCA to determine: 1) the effects of correcting for weight and body surface area (BSA) on the heparin dose-response distribution; and 2) the average dose of heparin (standard, weight-based, and BSA-based) required to achieve an activated clotting time (ACT) of 300 seconds. For each patient, height, weight, BSA, baseline ACT (HemoTec), bolus heparin dose, and post-heparin ACT were recorded and the heparin response calculated. There were no significant differences in the distributions of standard (SD =.017 +/- 006 sec/U, 34% of mean), weight-based (SD = 1.41 +/- 0.46 sec/U/kg, 33% of mean), and BSA-based (SD = 0.033 +/- 0.011 sec/U/m2, 32% of mean) heparin response. There were slight, but significant correlations between heparin response and weight (r = 0.37) and heparin response and BSA (r = 0.36). The estimated doses of heparin to achieve a HemoTec ACT of 300 seconds were 10,650 +/- 1270 U, 130 +/- 15 U/kg, and 5390 +/- 640 U/m2. CONCLUSIONS: There are slight but significant correlations between heparin response and both weight and BSA. The distributions of weight- and BSA-corrected heparin response are similar to that of standard heparin dosing. Thus, weight adjusted heparin dosing would not appear to be likely to provide a more reliable ACT response to bolus doses of heparin.
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