Therapeutische Umschau. Revue thérapeutique
-
Case Reports
[An infant with umbilical cord and intracranial hemorrhage--severe factor XIII deficiency].
Based on the description of a severe bleeding disorder in a young child a short overview on the genetics, the epidemiology, the pathophysiology, the clinical manifestations and the laboratory diagnosis of factor XIII deficiency is presented. The impressive clinical signs with bleeding starting in the neonatal period (prolonged bleeding from the umbilical cord), followed by severe, life-threatening episodes of intracranial hemorrhages should raise the clinical suspicion of FXIII deficiency. ⋯ The diagnosis of factor XIII deficiency is difficult but has important therapeutic consequences: patients with documented severe deficiency should be put on regular substitution with factor XIII concentrates. Appropriately timed periodic infusions of such factor XIII concentrates enable patients to live normal lives, free from catastrophic bleeding episodes.
-
Congenital afibrinogenemia is a rare autosomal recessive hemostatic disorder leading to unclottable global coagulation tests. Furthermore, it is associated with abnormal platelet aggregation and with severe bleeding episodes if untreated. Surprisingly, thrombotic complications may be observed quite frequently in afibrinogenemic patients following replacement of fibrinogen. A case of congenital afibrinogenemia is described in a patient who suffered from severe bleeding episodes in the absence of replacement therapy but developed a deep vein thrombosis with multiple pulmonary emboli after fibrinogen replacement and surgical treatment of a hip fracture, despite conventional heparin prophylaxis.