Low Molecular Weight Heparin Induced Skin Necrosis without Platelet Fall Revealing Immunoallergic Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia
Author(s) -
Thomas Godet,
Sébastien Perbet,
Aurélien Lebreton,
Guillaume Gayraud,
Sophie Cayot,
Aymeric Tremblay,
Aurélie Ravinet,
Sébastien Christophe,
Renaud Guérin,
Julien Pascal,
Matthieu Jabaudon,
Amr Hassan,
AnneFrançoise Sapin,
Jean-Étienne Bazin,
JeanMichel Constantin
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
case reports in hematology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-6560
pISSN - 2090-6579
DOI - 10.1155/2013/849168
Subject(s) - medicine , heparin induced thrombocytopenia , heparin , low molecular weight heparin , skin biopsy , necrosis , platelet , adverse effect , dermatology , biopsy , surgery
Low molecular weight heparins (LMWH) are commonly used in the ICU setting for thromboprophylaxis as well as curative decoagulation as required during renal replacement therapy (RRT). A rare adverse event revealing immunoallergic LMWH induced thrombopenia (HIT) is skin necrosis at injection sites. We report the case of a patient presenting with skin necrosis witnessing an HIT after RRT, without thrombocytopenia. The mechanism remains unclear. Anti-PF4/heparin antibodies, functional tests (HIPA and/or SRA), and skin biopsy are of great help to evaluate differential diagnosis with a low pretest probability 4T's score.
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