Hereditary Antithrombin Deficiency with Hemorrhagic Cerebral Infarction and Cardiac Thrombosis Occurred in Neonatal Period: A Case Report
2015
Antithrombin (AT) is the main inhibitor of blood coagulation proteases. Hereditary AT deficiency is an autosomal-dominant thrombophilic disorder caused by a SERPINC1 abnormality, it represents a risk factor for thromboembolic disease. A 25-day-old male infant was referred to Severance Children's Hospital for hemorrhagic cerebral infarction with hydrocephalus. The initial laboratory study showed 11% AT activity. An approximate 4 mm-×-3 mm-size thrombosis was also found in the right ventricle by echocardiography. We found two deletion in the coding and flanking sequences of SERPINC1 c.235C>T (p.Arg79Cys) and c.442T>C (p.Ser148Pro) at 10 months of age. The p.Ser148Pro mutation was found in his mother but the other was not. This case is a rare thrombotic event that occured early year in due to AT deficiency. Our patient had side effects after heparin treatment, so aspirin therapy was employed. No thrombotic events occurred until 1 year of age. pISSN 2233-5250 / eISSN 2233-4580 http://dx.doi.org/10.15264/cpho.2015.22.2.151 Clin Pediatr Hematol Oncol 2015;22:151∼154
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