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Life-Threatening Hypercoagulable State Following Splenectomy in ITP: Successful Management with Aggressive Antithrombotic Therapy and Danazol

Authors :
Yeon S. Ahn
Wenche Jy
Joaquin J. Jimenez
Lawrence L. Horstman
Thomas Scagnelli
Maike Tiede
Eugene R. Ahn
Carlos J. Bidot
Source :
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis. 11:347-352
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2005.

Abstract

A life-threatening hypercoagulable state (HCS) is reported that developed after splenectomy in idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). A 50-year-old active male was rejected for blood donation because of an incidental finding of low platelet counts, 40,000/uL. The diagnosis was ITP. Although asymptomatic, he underwent splenectomy because of poor response to steroids and intravenous (IV) gamma globulin. One month after splenectomy, he suffered pulmonary emboli without deep venous embolism (DVT), followed by bilateral DVT, threatening amputation of the legs. Emergency thrombolysis, insertion of stent, and IV heparin saved his legs. Extensive workup for HCS was negative. IV heparin was witheld for colonoscopy for possible gastrointestinal neoplasm, at which time DVT recurred, necessitating another thrombolysis and heparin infusion. He was discharged on enoxaparin, antiplatelet therapy, and danazol. Platelet hyperactivation, characterized by high platelet microparticles (PMP) and CD62P, was present throughout his course of active ITP, resolving when ITP went into remission with danazol therapy. ITP has remained in remission for 4 years after stopping enoxaparin and danazol. In vitro, his plasma in active ITP induced activation of normal platelets, generating PMP and inducing CD62p-positive platelets and platelet aggregates; his plasma from remission had no effect. This indicates the presence of a platelet activating factor, possibly anti-platelet antibodies. Splenectomy may have allowed procoagulant PMP to accumulate to high levels resulting in HCS. We advise awareness of thrombotic complications post-splenectomy in the subset of ITP patients who are largely asymptomatic and exhibit persisting platelet activation.

Details

ISSN :
19382723 and 10760296
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....058429ce5de369f99d6f284885f3d12c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/107602960501100316