Hi Emily,
I couldn't go to bed without trying to find out more info on this subject...so to Google I went...and found this:
What is an anticoagulant?An anticoagulant is a substance that prevents coagulation; that is, it stops blood from clotting.
What is an anticoagulant medication?A drug that is used as a "blood-thinner" to prevent the formation of blood clots and to maintain open blood vessels. Anticoagulants have various uses. Some are used for the prophylaxis (prevention) or the treatment of thromboembolic disorders. Thrombi are clots. Emboli are clots that break free, travel through the bloodstream, and lodge therein.
What are antiplatelet agents? Antiplatelet agents are medications that block the formation of blood clots by preventing the clumping of platelets.
There are three types of antiplatelet agents: aspirin, the thienopyridines, and the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors. These agents differ in four ways: the way in which they prevent platelets from clumping, their potency (how strongly they prevent clumping), how rapidly they work, and their cost.
How do antiplatelet agents work? Aspirin
Aspirin prevents blood from clotting by blocking the production of thromboxane A-2, a chemical that platelets produce that causes them to clump. Aspirin’s antiplatelet effect lasts for days while the other NSAIDs’ antiplatelet effects last for only hours.
Thienopyridines
In addition to thromboxane A-2, platelets also produce adenosine diphosphate (ADP). When ADP attaches to receptors on the surface of platelets, the platelets clump. The thienopyridines, for example, ticlopidine (
Ticlid) and clopidogrel (
Plavix), block the ADP receptor. Blocking the ADP receptor prevents ADP from attaching to the receptor and the platelets from clumping.
Glycoprotein IIB/IIa Inhibitors
The glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors such as abciximab (Reopro) and eptifibatide (Integrilin) prevent clumping of platelets by inhibiting a different receptor on the surface of platelets, the receptor for glycoprotein IIb/IIIa. The glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors that are approved by the FDA must be given intravenously.
http://www.medicinenet.com/aspirin_and_antiplatelet_medications/article.htm
I found a list of blood thinning medications, and Enoxaparin is included:
http://www.umm.edu/altmed/ConsDrugs/DrugCats/BloodthinningMedications.html[/color]
So...My guess is that blood thinners and anticoagulants are basically the same thing. Antiplatelet therapy/medication may have an anticoagulant effect, but aren't necessarily considered anticoagulants. I could be wrong, as I am not a doctor, but that is what I gathered from what I read. I will be sure to ask my neuro at my next appt this Saturday...
I hope I didn't confuse you..