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Late-onset, warfarin-caused necrosis occurring in a patient with infectious mononucleosis.
32
Citations
15
References
1984
Year
VasculitisImmunologyPathologyThrombosisElectron MicroscopyWarfarin NecrosisHematologyAtherosclerosisAutoimmune DiseaseStable Anticoagulation TherapyVascular BiologyClinical Infectious DiseaseSclerodermaThrombopoiesisBlood PlateletPathogenesisInfectious MononucleosisCoagulopathyMedicineAnticoagulant
A 25-year-old man with Klinefelter's syndrome and recurrent thromboplebitis , for which he had been receiving long-term warfarin sodium therapy, had bilateral ecchymoses on the hips coincident with serologically confirmed Epstein-Barr virus-caused mononucleosis. Biopsy specimens taken from the hip lesions showed microscopic findings consistent with a diagnosis of warfarin necrosis. Direct immunofluorescence microscopy disclosed vessel-wall deposition of IgM and heavy upper-dermal deposition of IgG. Electron microscopy disclosed nonspecific endothelial cell blebs that projected into the vessel lumen. The temporal association of mononucleosis with the onset of warfarin necrosis suggests that the viral illness may have precipitated an immunologic endothelial surface reaction, leading to thrombosis and secondary hemorrhage with infarction. To our knowledge, the appearance of warfarin necrosis in a patient receiving long-term, stable anticoagulation therapy has not been previously reported.
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