Incidental thrombocytosis: Should it concern the anesthesiologist?
Preoperative thrombocytosis, often detected incidentally in surgical patients and inadvertently overlooked, has important implications for the anesthesiologists. The primary form is a chronic clonal myeloproliferative disorder usually affecting adults while the secondary type is a benign reactive di...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of anaesthesiology, clinical pharmacology clinical pharmacology, 2014-04, Vol.30 (2), p.281-283 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Preoperative thrombocytosis, often detected incidentally in surgical patients and inadvertently overlooked, has important implications for the anesthesiologists. The primary form is a chronic clonal myeloproliferative disorder usually affecting adults while the secondary type is a benign reactive disease commonly found in children. Serious perioperative hemostatic complications are reported in primary thrombocytosis and hence, a detailed preoperative evaluation and initiation of therapy to lower the platelet count (PC) is required before undertaking surgery. Patients with reactive thrombocytosis however, usually have complication-free surgeries, and if there is no prior evidence of hemostatic complications and the reactive cause can be identified, no specific perioperative intervention may be required. A thorough preanesthetic checkup and implementation of basic thrombo-prophylaxis measures in all patients with a raised PC is advocated. We present here our experience with three infants diagnosed with high preoperative PC, presumably due to reactive causes, who underwent uneventful neurosurgeries at our institution. |
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ISSN: | 0970-9185 2231-2730 |
DOI: | 10.4103/0970-9185.130102 |