Note
: Currently, there is a lack of scientific data on the use of integrative therapies for the treatment or prevention of myeloproliferative disorders.
The integrative therapies listed below should be used only under the supervision of a qualified healthcare provider, and should not be used in replacement of other proven therapies or preventive measures.
A
Strong scientific evidence
- Policosanol
: Policosanol is a natural mixture that lowers cholesterol. Various studies have investigated the effect of policosanol on platelet aggregation. In general, studies suggest that policosanol aids in platelet aggregation inhibition, which means it helps to prevent blood from clotting.
- Avoid if allergic or hypersensitive to policosanol. Use cautiously if taking aspirin or blood pressure medications. Use cautiously with high blood pressure. Use cautiously if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Vitamin K
: Vitamin K is found in spinach, broccoli, asparagus, watercress, cabbage, cauliflower, green peas, beans, olives, canola, soybeans, meat, cereals, and dairy products. Warfarin is a blood-thinning drug that inhibits vitamin K-dependent clotting factors. Warfarin is prescribed by doctors for people with various conditions such as atrial fibrillation, artificial heart valves, history of serious blood clots, clotting disorders (hypercoagulability), or placement of indwelling catheters/ports. Usually, blood tests are done regularly to evaluate the extent of blood thinning, using a test for prothrombin time (PT) or International Normalized ratio (INR). The range for the PT/INR depends on the condition being treated. The PT/INR can become elevated for many reasons and sometimes can get dangerously high and increase the risk of serious bleeding. Patients taking warfarin should be aware of these potential causes, which include many drugs that interact with warfarin, liver disorders, or accidental warfarin overdose. Because the effects of warfarin on anticoagulation are usually delayed by several days, the PT/INR may not increase immediately at the time of overdose. If a person's blood becomes too "thin," management should be under strict medical supervision and may include oral or injected vitamin K for warfarin reversal.
- Avoid if allergic or hypersensitive to vitamin K. Injection into the muscle or vein should only be done by a healthcare professional; many serious side effects have occurred after injection. Menadiol (type of vitamin K that is not available in the United States) should be avoided with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency. Conditions that interfere with absorption of ingested vitamin K may lead to deficiency, including short gut, cystic fibrosis, malabsorption (various causes), pancreas or gall bladder disease, persistent diarrhea, sprue, or ulcerative colitis. Avoid if pregnant. Use cautiously if breastfeeding.
C
Unclear or conflicting scientific evidence
- Aortic acid
: Aortic extract is usually manufactured from the hearts of animals, such as sheep, cows, or pigs. Aortic acid is a broad term encompassing several components, including mesoglycan. Currently, there is not enough evidence to determine if aortic acid is an effective therapy for blood clots in the legs (deep vein thrombosis).
- Reports of allergic reactions are currently lacking. Due to the heparan sulfate content of mesoglycan, patients with allergies to heparin or heparinoid derivatives should use caution. Use cautiously with bleeding disorders or if taking anticoagulations. Use cautiously with high blood pressure or if taking blood pressure-lowering agents. Avoid if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Garlic
: The garlic bulb is made of many cloves that are wrapped in a paper-thin, white skin. It is used both medicinally and as a spice in food. The anti-platelet effects of garlic have been tested in several human trials. Because garlic has been associated with several cases of bleeding, therapy should be applied cautiously (particularly in patients using other agents that may precipitate bleeding).
- Avoid if allergic or hypersensitive to garlic or other members of the Lilaceae
(lily) family (like hyacinth, tulip, onion, leek, chive). Avoid with a history of bleeding problems, asthma, diabetes, low blood pressure, or thyroid disorders. Stop using supplemental garlic two weeks before and immediately after dental/surgical/diagnostic procedures with bleeding risks. Avoid supplemental doses if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Ginger
: The underground above-ground stems of ginger have been used in Chinese, Japanese, and Indian medicine for hundreds of years. Limited available study suggested that ginger may act as an anti-platelet agent in patients with high blood pressure when used in combination with nifedipine. More study is warranted in this area.
- Avoid if allergic to ginger or other members of the Zingiberaceae
family (like red ginger, Alpinia purpurata, shell ginger, Alpinia zeru, green cardamom, and balsam of Peru). Avoid with anticoagulation therapy. Avoid large quantities of fresh cut ginger with inflammatory bowel disease or with a history of intestinal obstruction. Use cautiously before surgery or with gastric or duodenal ulcers, gallstones, heart disease, or diabetes. Use cautiously long-term. Use cautiously in underweight patients. Use cautiously if taking heart medications or sedatives and if driving or operating heavy machinery. Use cautiously if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Grape seed
: Grape leaves, sap, and fruit have been used medicinally since the Greek empire. Early human and animal studies show that extracts of grape seed can aid in platelet aggregation inhibition, which means it helps to prevent blood from clotting.
- Avoid if allergic or hypersensitive to grapes or other grape compounds. Avoid with bleeding disorders or with active bleeding. Use cautiously if taking drugs that may increase the risk of bleeding. Use cautiously with drugs processed using the liver's "cytochrome P450" enzyme system. Use cautiously with blood pressure disorders or if taking ACE inhibitors. Avoid if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Pycnogenol®
: Pycnogenol® is the patented trade name for a water extract of the bark from the French maritime pine, which is grown in coastal southwestern France. Limited human study reports platelet aggregation inhibition in smokers. Pycnogenol® may also aid in prevention of blood clots during long airplane flights in moderate-to-high risk subjects. Edema (swelling) may also be reduced. Further research is needed to confirm these results.
- Avoid if allergic/hypersensitive to pycnogenol, its components, or members of the Pinaceae family. Use cautiously with diabetes, low blood sugar levels, or bleeding disorders. Use cautiously if taking lipid-lowering agents, medications that may increase the risk of bleeding, blood pressure-lowering agents, or immune-stimulating or inhibiting agents. Avoid if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Rutin
: Rutin is a yellow crystalline flavonol that is found in various plants, especially the buckwheat plant, black tea, apple peels, onions, and citrus. Human study suggests that Venoruton®, in combination with elastic compression or thrombectomy, may help treat thrombosis. Additional study is needed in this area.
- Avoid if allergic/hypersensitive to O-(beta-hydroxyethyl)-rutosides or plants that rutin is commonly found in (such as rue, tobacco, or buckwheat). Use cautiously in elderly patients. Use cautiously with skin conditions. Use cautiously if taking diuretics, anticoagulants or medications used to treat edema. Use cautiously if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Seaweed, kelp, bladderwrack
: Bladderwrack (Fucus vesiculosus) is a brown seaweed found along the northern coasts of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and North and Baltic seas. Another seaweed that grows alongside bladderwrack is Ascophyllum nodosum, and
it is often combined with bladderwrack in kelp preparations. Laboratory study has found anticoagulant properties in fucans or fucoidans, which are components of brown algae such as bladderwrack. However, high-quality human studies are currently lacking.
- Avoid if allergic or hypersensitive to Fucus vesiculosus or iodine. Avoid with a history of thyroid disease, bleeding, acne, kidney disease, blood clots, nerve disorders, high blood pressure, stroke, or diabetes. Avoid if pregnant or breastfeeding.
- Shea butter
: Shea butter is derived from the nut of the shea tree (Vitellaria paradoxa). In human trials, shea butter was shown to have anticoagulant properties. Additional studies are needed to confirm these findings.
- Avoid with known allergy/hypersensitivity to shea butter or its constituents. Use cautiously if allergic to latex. Use cautiously if taking anticoagulants. There is currently insufficient available safety evidence during pregnancy or breastfeeding.
- Turmeric
: Turmeric (Curcuma longa) is a perennial plant native to India and Indonesia, and it is often used as a spice in cooking. The rhizome (root) of turmeric has long been used in traditional Asian medicine to treat gastrointestinal upset, arthritis pain, and fatigue. Early research suggests that turmeric may aid in blood clot prevention. However, more research is needed to confirm these results.
- Avoid if allergic or hypersensitive to turmeric, curcumin, yellow food colorings, or plants belonging to the Zingiberaceae (ginger) family. Use cautiously with a history of bleeding disorders, immune system deficiencies, liver disease, diabetes, low blood sugar levels, or gallstones. Use cautiously with blood-thinners, such as warfarin (like Coumadin®), or blood sugar-altering medications. Avoid in medicinal amounts if pregnant or breastfeeding. Turmeric should be stopped before scheduled surgery.
- Vitamin E
: Vitamin E exists in eight different forms ("isomers"): alpha, beta, gamma and delta tocopherol; and alpha, beta, gamma and delta tocotrienol. Alpha-tocopherol is the most active form in humans. Data suggests that supplementation with vitamin E may reduce the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in women and in patients with a prior history or genetic predisposition for this condition.
- Avoid if allergic or hypersensitive to vitamin E. Avoid with retinitis pigmentosa (loss of peripheral vision). Use cautiously with bleeding disorders or if taking blood thinners. Avoid doses greater than the recommended daily level in pregnant women and breastfeeding women.
- Yohimbe bark extract
: The terms yohimbine, yohimbine hydrochloride, and yohimbe bark extract are all related. However, they each have a slightly different meaning. Yohimbine is found in the bark of the Pausinystalia yohimbe tree. Yohimbine hydrochloride is a standardized form of yohimbine that is available as a prescription drug in the United States. Yohimbine hydrochloride has been used to treat many medical conditions, such as erectile dysfunction and dry mouth. Preclinical studies report that yohimbine alkaloid, isolated from yohimbe bark, may aid in inhibition of platelet aggregation. Research in humans is limited, and more research is necessary in this area.
- Yohimbine is generally well tolerated in recommended doses. However, many side effects have been reported with yohimbine hydrochloride and may apply to yohimbe bark. Avoid if allergic to yohimbe, any of its components, or yohimbine-containing products. Use cautiously with peptic ulcer disease, kidney disease, high blood pressure, heart disease, or if taking drugs that affect blood sugar levels. Avoid with benign prostate hypertrophy (enlarged prostate), anxiety, mania, depression, stress disorders, post-traumatic stress disorders, bipolar disorders, or schizophrenia. Avoid use in children or in pregnant or breastfeeding women.
D
Fair negative scientific evidence
- Boron
: It has been proposed that boron may affect the activity of certain blood clotting factors. However, study results conflict regarding boron's specific coagulation effects. Additional research is needed to form a clear conclusion.
- Avoid if allergic or sensitive to boron, boric acid, borax, citrate, aspartate, or glycinate. Avoid with a history of diabetes, seizure disorder, kidney disease, liver disease, depression, anxiety, high blood pressure, skin rash, anemia, asthma, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Avoid with hormone-sensitive conditions like breast cancer or prostate cancer. Avoid if pregnant or breastfeeding.