By Independent Staff Writer
If your doctor has prescribed the relatively new drug, Pradaxa, as an alternative to Warfarin, you may have been alarmed to hear of the potential issues with Pradaxa. Pradaxa was approved by the FDA in late 2010 after the manufacturer, Boehringer Ingelheim, presented the drug as a much better alternative to Warfarin, which had been used exclusively since the 1950’s as a treatment for the prevention of systemic embolisms and strokes. Pradaxa is used to treat patients with atrial fibrillation and works primarily by thinning the blood of the patient. While Pradaxa did appear to work slightly better than Warfarin, it has been shown to have serious side effects, some of them fatal.
If your doctor has prescribed the relatively new drug, Pradaxa, as an alternative to Warfarin, you may have been alarmed to hear of the potential issues with Pradaxa. Pradaxa was approved by the FDA in late 2010 after the manufacturer, Boehringer Ingelheim, presented the drug as a much better alternative to Warfarin, which had been used exclusively since the 1950’s as a treatment for the prevention of systemic embolisms and strokes. Pradaxa is used to treat patients with atrial fibrillation and works primarily by thinning the blood of the patient. While Pradaxa did appear to work slightly better than Warfarin, it has been shown to have serious side effects, some of them fatal.