Prothrombin time (PT) is a blood test. It measures how long it takes for blood to clot. Prothrombin is one of several clotting factors that the body makes. It helps your child's blood form clots when a blood vessel is damaged.
A PT test may also be called an INR (international normalized ratio) test.
Prothrombin time (PT) is measured to:
A health professional uses a needle to take a blood sample, usually from the arm.
In some cases, the health professional will take a sample of blood from your fingertip instead of your vein. For a finger stick blood test, the health professional will clean your hand, use a lancet to puncture the skin, and place a small tube on the puncture site to collect your blood.
Some people use a monitor at home to test a small blood sample.
In general, there's nothing you have to do before your child has this test, unless your doctor tells you to.
Each lab has a different range for what's normal. Your lab report should show the range that your lab uses for each test. The normal range is just a guide. Your doctor will also look at your results based on your age, health, and other factors. A value that isn't in the normal range may still be normal for you.
A method of standardizing prothrombin time results, called the international normalized ratio (INR) system, has been developed so the results among labs using different test methods can be understood in the same way. Using the INR system, treatment with warfarin (Coumadin) will be the same. In some labs, only the INR is reported and the PT is not reported.
The warfarin dose is changed so that the prothrombin time is longer than normal (by about 1.5 to 2.5 times the normal value or INR values 2 to 3). Prothrombin times are also kept at longer times for people with artificial heart valves, because these valves have a high chance of causing clots to form.
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