Medical Management of a Large Aortic Thrombus in a Young Woman With Essential Thrombocythemia

Aortic thrombus formation is rare in the patients with essential thrombocytosis (ET); therefore, no guidelines for its management have been established. Embolism from ET-associated large vessel thrombi is potentially lethal and has been managed surgically in a few reported cases. We describe herein...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mayo Clinic proceedings 2001, Vol.76 (4), p.427-431
Hauptverfasser: Fang, Ming, Agha, Samina, Lockridge, Leslie, Lee, Ronald, Cleary, Joseph P., Mazur, Eric M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aortic thrombus formation is rare in the patients with essential thrombocytosis (ET); therefore, no guidelines for its management have been established. Embolism from ET-associated large vessel thrombi is potentially lethal and has been managed surgically in a few reported cases. We describe herein a 45-year-old black woman with ET found to have a 3.5-cm, pedunculated intra-aortic thrombus at the thoracoabdominal junction. How to treat this potentially devastating aortic thrombus was a management dilemma. We believed, based on the patient's diagnosis of ET and the histology of similar thrombi in 1 reported series, that the aortic thrombus was a “white thrombus” consisting primarily of aggregated platelets with a minimal fibrin network and almost no entrapped erythrocytes. The patient was treated with aspirin, 325 mg daily, as a platelet antiaggregating agent and hydroxyurea, 1500 mg daily, to reduce the platelet count to less than 450 × 10 9/L. The thrombus resolved without severe thromboembolic events. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of a large intra-aortic thrombosis associated with ET that has been successfully managed with medical therapy alone.
ISSN:0025-6196
1942-5546
DOI:10.4065/76.4.427