KRYOFIBRINOGENAMIE DURCH MONOKLONALE ANTI-FIBRINOGEN-ANTIKORPER
2008
HISTORY AND CLINICAL FINDINGS: For nine years a 54-year-old woman had been suffering from worsening treatment-resistant cold-dependent purpura of the limbs as well as cutaneous ulcerations and arthralgia, which recently had occurred even at a even slight decrease in room temperature. INVESTIGATIONS: A special form of cryofibrinogenemia was identified by affinity-chromatographic separation of a plasma cryoprecipitate. From this cryoprecipitate a monoclonal antifibrinogen antibody (IgG-kappa) was isolated which, in the cold, formed a precipitating complex with fibrinogen. Paraproteinaemia was not demonstrated by conventional serum and plasma electrophoresis. There was no evidence of neoplasma. TREATMENT AND COURSE: Attempted treatment with steroids, fibrinolytic agents and intravenous cyclophosphamide was unsuccessful. But long-term repeated plasmaphereses and anti-immunoglobulin adsorption improved the symptoms. After 5 years of this treatment-14 years after onset of symptoms-the patient died of the consequences of fulminant pulmonary embolism. CONCLUSION: To establish the diagnosis of monoclonal cryofibrinogenemia it is necessary, first, to identify the cryoprecipitate in plasma; secondly, to undertake affinity-chromatographic separation of the cryoprecipitate with subsequent analysis of its components.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
0
References
3
Citations
NaN
KQI