Acquired-Transient Factor X Deficiency in a Teenager with Extensive Burns


Autoria(s): Mascarenhas, A; Eusébio, M; Freitas, O; Almeida, T
Data(s)

19/11/2013

19/11/2013

2011

Resumo

Acquired factor X deficiency is an extremely rare situation. It has shown to be associated with systemic amyloidosis, respiratory mycoplasma infection, factor X inhibitors, antiphospholipid antibodies, vitamin K defi ciency/liver disease as well as the use of certain medications (meropenem, valproic acid). The pathogenesis and transient nature of this deficit remain poorly understood. The authors describe the case of a teenager hospitalised for extensive burns that developed active bleeding after removal of central venous catheter. He was diagnosed with transient factor X deficiency. Normalisation of coagulation status and factor X levels occurred spontaneously 10 days after the bleeding episode.

Identificador

BMJ Case Reports 2011 Feb 17; doi:10.1136/bcr.12.2010.3618

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.17/1555

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

BMJ Publishing Group

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Factor X #Queimaduras #Adolescente #HDE PED #HDE HEM PED
Tipo

article