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Case Reports
Journal Article
Management of dysfibrinogenemia in pregnancy: A case report.
Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis 2018 March
BACKGROUND: Dysfibrinogenemia is a rare coagulation disorder caused by mutations in the fibrinogen gene that results in abnormal fibrinogen function. Dysfibrinogenemia has a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations including asymptomatic(55%), hemorrhage (25%), and thrombosis (20%).
METHODS: We reported a 30-year-old woman with 35 weeks gestation. She was misdiagnosed with hypofibrinogenemia in a local hospital, and then she was treated with fibrinogen concentrate. However, she was diagnosed as dysfibrinogenemia in our hospital base on her low function fibrinogen level (0.55 g/L) and her normal immunologic fibrinogen level (3.80 g/L). This patient had neither bleeding symptom nor thromboembolic event. Her obstetrical history included one normal pregnancy in 2008 with uneventful full-term delivery.
RESULTS: Multidisciplinary experts suggested that there should be no specific intervention in this case because of the patient had no previous episodes of abnormal bleeding or thrombotic. She had an uneventful delivery with no abnormal bleeding symptom or thromboembolic.
CONCLUSION: Dysfibrinogenemia patients without personal or family history of bleeding and thromboembolic events, do not need specific therapeutic intervention.
METHODS: We reported a 30-year-old woman with 35 weeks gestation. She was misdiagnosed with hypofibrinogenemia in a local hospital, and then she was treated with fibrinogen concentrate. However, she was diagnosed as dysfibrinogenemia in our hospital base on her low function fibrinogen level (0.55 g/L) and her normal immunologic fibrinogen level (3.80 g/L). This patient had neither bleeding symptom nor thromboembolic event. Her obstetrical history included one normal pregnancy in 2008 with uneventful full-term delivery.
RESULTS: Multidisciplinary experts suggested that there should be no specific intervention in this case because of the patient had no previous episodes of abnormal bleeding or thrombotic. She had an uneventful delivery with no abnormal bleeding symptom or thromboembolic.
CONCLUSION: Dysfibrinogenemia patients without personal or family history of bleeding and thromboembolic events, do not need specific therapeutic intervention.
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