MAJOR — Use With Caution
Serrapeptase + Apixaban — MAJOR Bleeding Risk
Evidence level: MODERATE
WARNING: Taking Serrapeptase with Apixaban significantly increases your risk of bleeding. Serrapeptase naturally thins the blood by breaking down fibrin, and combining it with Apixaban creates a dangerous additive effect that could lead to serious or uncontrolled bleeding.
Serrapeptase is a proteolytic enzyme with fibrinolytic properties that may enhance the anticoagulant/antiplatelet effect of Apixaban. The enzyme degrades fibrin and may reduce blood viscosity, creating additive bleeding risk when combined with pharmaceutical anticoagulants.
Do NOT combine Serrapeptase with Apixaban without explicit approval from your prescribing physician. If you must take both, your doctor should monitor INR/clotting factors more frequently. Stop Serrapeptase at least 2 weeks before any surgical procedure. Seek immediate medical attention if you notice unusual bruising, blood in urine or stool, or prolonged bleeding from cuts.
Take Apixaban as prescribed. Serrapeptase can typically be taken with a meal, spaced 1-2 hours from the medication for clean absorption. Discuss this combination with your pharmacist for personalized guidance.
Higher risk for: elderly patients, those with liver disease, history of GI bleeding, concurrent use of multiple blood thinners, recent surgery, vitamin K intake changes, alcohol use, or low body weight.
Unusual bruising, nosebleeds, blood in urine or stool, bleeding gums, prolonged bleeding from minor cuts, dark tarry stools, heavy menstrual bleeding, dizziness or weakness (signs of internal bleeding).
Discuss the additive fibrinolytic effect of Serrapeptase with your anticoagulant therapy. Request more frequent INR/coagulation monitoring. Ask about appropriate washout periods before procedures.
Blood thinners have narrow safety margins. Instead of Serrapeptase, consider safer options: CoQ10 (with INR monitoring), vitamin D3, or probiotics — these have minimal anticoagulant interactions. Always inform your anticoagulation clinic about any supplements.
WARNING: Taking Serrapeptase with Apixaban significantly increases your risk of bleeding. Serrapeptase naturally thins the blood by breaking down fibrin, and combining it with Apixaban creates a dangerous additive effect that could lead to serious or uncontrolled bleeding.
Take Apixaban as prescribed. Serrapeptase can typically be taken with a meal, spaced 1-2 hours from the medication for clean absorption. Discuss this combination with your pharmacist for personalized guidance.
Unusual bruising, nosebleeds, blood in urine or stool, bleeding gums, prolonged bleeding from minor cuts, dark tarry stools, heavy menstrual bleeding, dizziness or weakness (signs of internal bleeding).
Blood thinners have narrow safety margins. Instead of Serrapeptase, consider safer options: CoQ10 (with INR monitoring), vitamin D3, or probiotics — these have minimal anticoagulant interactions. Always inform your anticoagulation clinic about any supplements.
Discuss the additive fibrinolytic effect of Serrapeptase with your anticoagulant therapy. Request more frequent INR/coagulation monitoring. Ask about appropriate washout periods before procedures.
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