[Recurrent idiopathic cerebral infarction in a 5-year-old boy, with emphasis on the importance of platelet aggregation analysis for appropriate selection of anti-platelet drugs].

2009 
: We present a 5-year-old boy with recurrent idiopathic cerebral infarction in which analysis of platelet hyperaggregability was useful in choosing appropriate anti-platelet drugs. The patient presented with gait disturbance at the age of 5 years and 1 month. Brain MRI demonstrated multiple infarctions in the right thalamus and left cerebellum. There were no apparent underlying diseases including hematological, cardiac and vascular abnormalities. He was diagnosed as idiopathic cerebral infarction. First, we administered ticlopidine and he remained stable with persistent mild intention tremor in the left upper extremity for 4 months. Then he developed the second stroke at the age of 5 years and 5 months, and multiple infarctions in the right celebellum and cerebellar vermis were demonstrated. On platelet aggregation analysis, adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-induced aggregation was inhibited, probably due to ticlopidine administration. Collagen- and epinephrine-induced platelet aggregation showed hyperaggregation, so we started to administer cilostazol, which inhibits only epinephrine-induced hyperaggregation. We also added aspirin, which inhibits collagen-induced hyperaggregation. The combination of anti-platelet drugs inhibited epinephrine-, collagen- and ADP-induced hyperaggregation in this patient. He has been stable on the triple combination of anti-platelet drugs without further episodes of cerebral infarction or transient ischemic attack for 4 years to date. Appropriate selection of anti-platelet therapy was achieved by the simple and repeatable platelet aggregation analyses, which must be considered even in pediatric patients with cerebral infarction.
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