| Dr. Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD |
"Bob K." wrote:
> Dr. Chung, thank you for replying.
You are welcome. All praises belong to my heavenly Father, Whom I love with
all my heart, soul, mind, and strength :-)
>
> The surgery was on my finger. The warafrin is from the same bottle.
> That's why this is so strange. What I am doing is increasing dosage by
> very small amounts (2%) and retesting after 3-4 weeks. I don't think that
> my INR below 2.0 is significant risk. I am in NSR, have been for 1.5
> years now. My doctor has no other idea.
>
> The only thing possibly different is the time of day of the test. I take
> my dose about 7:00 AM. Before the surgery I would go to the blood lab
> about 8:00 AM. The last two times I went at noon. Possible?
>
Yes but unlikely. More likely is more vitamin K in what you are eating. New
multivitamin ?
Servant to the humblest person in the universe,
Andrew
--
Dr. Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
Board-Certified Cardiologist
http://www.heartmdphd.com/
**
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