Eleven patients with cholestatic jaundice had measurements of plasma vitamin K1 performed. Seven of these 11 (64%) had subnormal levels. The prothrombin time (PT) was prolonged in three of 15 patients with cholestasis (20%), the patient with the longest PT had the lowest vitamin K1 level. A single intramuscular (im) dose of 10 mg vitamin K1 lowered the PT in 9/15 patients (includes correcting the three prolonged PTs). The initial mean plasma vitamin K1 level rose 24 h later, to a mean plasma level which was 33 times the upper limit of the normal physiological range. These preliminary results suggest that a majority of patients presenting with cholestatic jaundice have low tissue reserves of vitamin K1, and that guidelines for vitamin K1 therapy in patients with cholestatic jaundice should be revised.
CITATION STYLE
O’Brien, D. P., Shearer, M. J., Waldron, R. P., Horgan, P. G., & Given, H. F. (1994). The extent of vitamin K deficiency in patients with cholestatic jaundice: A preliminary communication. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 87(6), 320–322. https://doi.org/10.1177/014107689408700607
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