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Blood Thinners Los Angeles CA

Local resource for blood thinners in Los Angeles, CA. Includes detailed information on local businesses that provide access to aspirin blood thinner, blood thinner supplements, natural blood thinners, herbal blood thinner, ibuprofen blood thinner, and anticoagulant blood thinner, as well as advice and content on blood clots.

Rite-Aide
(323) 735-0774
1815 South Vermont Avenue
Los Angeles, CA
Walgreens
213-694-2880
617 W. 7th Street
Los Angeles, CA
Rite-Aide
(213) 381-5257
334 South Vermont Avenue
Los Angeles, CA
Rite-Aide
(323) 235-3535
4322 South Figueroa Street
Los Angeles, CA
Rite-Aide
(213) 623-5820
500 South Broadway
Los Angeles, CA
Rite-Aide
(213) 747-9581
446 East Washington Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA
Rite-Aide
(213) 896-0083
600 West Seventh Street
Los Angeles, CA
Rite-Aide
(323) 939-7911
959 Crenshaw Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA
Walgreens
323-692-0506
5843 West Pico Blvd
Los Angeles, CA
Rite-Aide
(323) 467-1366
226 North Larchmont Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA

Blood Thinners

Blood Thinners - What You Need to Know About Them

The chief reason to thin the blood is to keep blood clots from forming. When the body is injured in any way it sends special cells called platelets to repair the area. These can stick together and obstruct veins. A group of these cells can form at the entrance to a vital organ and block off circulation to it, which is called a thrombosis. When a group of these cells breaks free and blocks a vein or organ it is called an embolism. Both can cause heart attacks and strokes.

Blood thinners are widely prescribed to help avoid strokes and heart attacks. They act as anti-coagulants, keeping the blood cells from sticking to each other. The most common are Coumadin (warfarin), synthetic versions of the naturally-occurring coumarin, which is found in trace amounts in plants such as licorice, lavender, and woodruff, and aspirin.

Coumadin is also used as a rat poison, and some people who use Coumadin have side effects including bleeding. Many commonly used medications interact with warfarin, as do some foods, and its activity has to be monitored by frequent blood testing for the international normalization ratio (INR) to ensure an adequate yet safe dose is taken.

• Coumadin can cause bleeding, hemorrhaging, and pain in the toes caused by small lumps of cholesterol that settle there; it can also interact with other medications and even foods and herbs, like garlic. There also disturbing recent (2009-10) findings about the safety of warfarin: it nearly doubles the risk of dying after a traumatic injury. And from the May, 2010 issue of the journal Archives of Neurology, people who are taking warfarin when they have a stroke are subject to a nearly 10-fold higher risk of brain hemorrhage if they're treated with an intravenous clot-dissolving medication (tPA). For these and other reasons, the use of Coumadin as the blood thinner of choice is declining.

• Aspirin can cause internal bleeding and irritation to the stomach lining 

Natural blood thinners

Many natural blood thinners contain coumarin in small amounts, along with other natural compounds. Some patients have found that when used by ingesting the foods that contain them, or taken in supplement form, they can work as well as prescription medications.

Most work by keeping the platelets from sticking to each other, which is the whole purpose of using blood thinners.

NOTE: If taking Coumadin or other prescription blood thinners do not discontinue them and start a natural remedy before consulting a physician.

Garlic, which studies have shown can reduce the build-up of cholesterol as well as reducing plaque deposits in the aorta; garlic can also react with warfarin

Feverfew, a traditional garden herb, originally used to reduce fever

Dong quai, also called Angelica sinensis, which is also known as the “female ginseng,” is used in traditional Chinese medi...

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