Perioperative Anticoagulation: Key Principles

1) Balance bleeding and thrombosis risk

Higher bleeding-risk procedures require longer holds and later restarts. Elevated thrombosis risk (e.g., mechanical valves, recent VTE, high AF stroke risk) may necessitate bridging if on warfarin, but **not** for DOACs.

2) Conservative timing wins

When uncertainty exists, extend the hold/restart window conservatively and verify hemostasis. Our calculator surfaces timestamped plans tied to the procedure date/time.

3) Neuraxial safety is special

For neuraxial contexts (epidural/spinal/intrathecal, neurosurgery), use stricter holds and adhere to catheter rules. Some renal thresholds are neuraxial hard-stops (e.g., avoid neuraxial with dabigatran CrCl <30).

4) Warfarin has governance

5) DOACs are never bridged

Baseline holds/restarts vary by bleeding risk and renal function (especially for dabigatran). For very high thrombosis risk, MDACC notes rare exceptions—consult Hematology.

6) Catheter gating

If a neuraxial catheter is present, withhold anticoagulants while in place. Earliest restarts after removal: DOAC +24 h, LMWH +4 h, UFH +1 h—then use the **later of** baseline window vs these gaps.

See this in action with the AnticoagPlanner calculator.

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Disclaimer: Educational content. Supports, not replaces, clinical judgment. Confirm local policy and anesthesia guidance for neuraxial catheters.