Batroxobin

Batroxobin is an anticoagulant medicine used to prevent and treat blood clots. It is used prior to surgery to reduce the risk of blood clots forming, as well as to treat existing clots. It works by inhibiting the action of certain clotting factors in the blood, thereby preventing or dissolving clots. Batroxobin is administered as an injection into a vein and can also be used in combination with other anticoagulants such as heparin.

Batroxobin is not a recognized medication and has no established use in conventional medicine. While it's a naturally occurring venom derived from the Brazilian pit viper (Bothrops moojeni), it's not included in any major regulatory bodies' lists of approved drugs, such as those of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the European Medicines Agency (EMA).

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Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification
B - Blood and blood forming organs
B02 Antihemorrhagics
B02B - Vitamin K and other hemostatics
B02BX Other systemic hemostatics
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