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Inherited and Secondary Thrombophilia
Author(s) -
Kevin P. Cohoon,
John A. Heit
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/circulationaha.113.001943
Subject(s) - medicine , thrombophilia , thrombosis
Case Presentation 1: A healthy 19-year-old man presented with new chest pain and near syncope. Computed tomography pulmonary angiography showed a saddle pulmonary embolus. The patient denied recent travel, trauma, surgery, or hospitalization. His mother had 2 miscarriages at 10 weeks of gestation, and his maternal grandfather had deep venous thrombosis at 60 years of age.Case Presentation 2: A healthy 45-year-old woman reported new dyspnea and left calf pain. Computed tomography pulmonary angiography and compression venous duplex ultrasonography showed bilateral pulmonary emboli and acute left leg deep vein thrombosis, respectively. The patient denied exogenous hormone use, recent travel, trauma, surgery, or hospitalization. Her health maintenance was current, and she gave a family history of pernicious anemia, Grave disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Laboratory analyses showed reduced hemoglobin (11.4 g/dL; normal, 12.0–15.5 g/dL), increased red blood cell distribution width (18.9%; normal, 11.9%–15.5%), and mild thrombocytopenia.Neither patient had previous venous thromboembolism, and both were referred to the Mayo Clinic Thrombophilia Center for apparent idiopathic venous thromboembolism.Thrombophilia is defined as a predisposition (susceptibility) to thrombosis. Thrombophilia is not a disease per se, but may be associated with a disease (eg, cancer), drug exposure (eg, oral contraceptives) or condition (eg, pregnancy or postpartum, secondary thrombophilia; Table 1), and thrombophilia may be inherited (Table 2).1 This concept is important because disease susceptibility does not imply an absolute requirement for primary or secondary prevention, or for treatment. Most persons with a thrombophilia do not develop thrombosis. Thus, thrombophilia must be considered in the context of other risk factors for incident thrombosis, or predictors of recurrent thrombosis, when estimating the need for primary or secondary prophylaxis, respectively.View this table:Table 1. Secondary Thrombophilia1View this table:Table 2. Inherited Thrombophilia1The role of special coagulation testing for an acquired or inherited thrombophilia is controversial. Thrombophilia testing should only be done if …

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