• J Extra Corpor Technol · Jun 2011

    Case Reports

    Severe thrombotic and bleeding complications in a baby with heterozygous factor V Leiden and acquired von Willebrand disease on ECMO.

    • Ozlem Bilen, Laura Loftis, and Jun Teruya.
    • Department of Pathology and Immunology, Baylor College of Medicine, Division of Transfusion Medicine and Coagulation, Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
    • J Extra Corpor Technol. 2011 Jun 1;43(2):64-9.

    AbstractWe aim to present the case of a 5-week-old girl with severe respiratory failure placed on veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) that was then switched to veno-arterial ECMO. She required up to 60 units/kg/hr of heparin to keep her heparin level within the target range at .3-.7 units/mL. During the ECMO course, substantial thrombus formation was observed within the venous site of the ECMO cannula, which led to two circuit changes on ECMO day 9 and day 20. On ECMO day 15, she was noticed to have purpuric lesions on her chest and her right hand with no obvious arterial or venous clot detected by Doppler ultrasound. She was also noted to have remarkable hemolysis as the plasma free hemoglobin levels were substantially elevated up to 700 mg/dL. She was noted to have continuous oozing from the catheter insertion sites despite adequate underlying coagulation status. Her subsequent platelet function analysis, the thromboelastography, and thromboelastography platelet mapping suggested substantial platelet dysfunction. Her von Willebrand panel revealed absence of high molecular weight multimers. Further coagulation workup was prompted which revealed heterozygosity for factor V Leiden. The patient developed severe pulmonary hemorrhages and ECMO was discontinued on day 40.

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