Anticoagulants vs Antiplatelets vs Thrombolytics
Mechanisms, Use Cases & High-Yield Step 2 CK Exceptions Explained
π§ͺ 1. Medication Classes Overview
βοΈ 2. Mechanism of Action Comparison
π 3. Clinical Use Cases
π 4. Key Step 2/CK + NBME Tips
Anticoagulants = prevent new clots (do not break existing ones).
Thrombolytics = used acutely to dissolve thrombi (e.g., ischemic stroke, STEMI without PCI).
Antiplatelets = arterial clots (e.g., coronary, cerebral) β platelets matter more in high-flow systems.
Anticoagulants = venous clots (DVT/PE) β coagulation cascade driven.
Never combine anticoagulants + antiplatelets long term unless absolutely indicated (ββ bleeding risk).
Thrombolytics are contraindicated in most cases of recent surgery, active bleeding, or hemorrhagic stroke history.
π§ Mnemonic: "PAT-A"
π Drug Quick Sheet
π§ Master Table with EXCEPTIONS and Nuance
𧩠NBME/Step-Style Exceptions
𧬠1. Atrial Fibrillation
β Use anticoagulants to prevent embolic stroke.
β Donβt use aspirin alone unless patient is at low CHAβDSβ-VASc score (e.g., score = 0).
β οΈ Mechanical heart valve β must use warfarin (NOT DOACs like apixaban).
π©Έ 2. Post-MI
β Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) (aspirin + clopidogrel/ticagrelor) after PCI.
β Avoid triple therapy (anticoagulant + 2 antiplatelets) unless compelling indication β increased bleeding risk.
β οΈ If patient is on warfarin for Afib + just got a stent, limit DAPT duration and monitor closely.
π§ 3. Ischemic Stroke
β Thrombolytics (tPA) if <4.5 hours, and patient meets criteria.
β Do NOT give tPA if:
BP >185/110
INR >1.7
Platelets <100k
Glucose <50 or >400
Stroke >1/3 of MCA territory on CT
𦡠4. DVT/PE
β Start with heparin, then bridge to warfarin or start DOAC directly.
β Avoid DOACs in severe renal failure (CrCl <30 mL/min) β use warfarin instead.
πΆ 5. Pregnancy
β Use LMWH (enoxaparin) or UFH (doesnβt cross placenta).
β Avoid warfarin β teratogenic, esp. in 1st trimester.
β Avoid DOACs β insufficient safety data in pregnancy.
π₯ 6. Massive PE with Hypotension
β Use thrombolytics (alteplase) if:
Patient is unstable (shock, hypotension)
β Do not delay lytics for CT angiogram if clinical signs of massive PE and patient crashing.