Thromboembolic complication in Essential Thrombocythemia
Zahra Mozaheb
Corresponding author: Zahra Mozaheb, Hematologist-Oncologist, Department of Hematology, Imam Reza Hospital, Mashhad university of Medical Science, Iran
Received: 04 Nov 2012 - Accepted: 18 Nov 2012 - Published: 19 Nov 2012
Domain: Clinical medicine
Keywords: Thrombocythemia, microvascular occusions, gangrene
©Zahra Mozaheb et al. Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Zahra Mozaheb et al. Thromboembolic complication in Essential Thrombocythemia. Pan African Medical Journal. 2012;13:58. [doi: 10.11604/pamj.2012.13.58.2172]
Available online at: https://www.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/article/13/58/full
Thromboembolic complication in Essential Thrombocythemia
Zahra Mozaheb1,&
1Department of Hematology, Imam Reza Hospital, Mashhad university of Medical Science, Iran
&Corresponding author
Zahra Mozaheb, Hematologist-Oncologist, Department of Hematology, Imam Reza Hospital, Mashhad university of Medical Science, Iran
The presenting symptoms of patients with essential thrombocythemia are quite variable. After detection of thrombocytosis about 13 to 37 percent of patients relate symptoms due to hemorrhagic event, and about 22 to 84 percent of patients report thromboembolic complication. The thrombotic events primarily involved the microvasculature, with thrombosis of large vessels occuring far less frequently. Microvascular occusions involving the toes and finger are frequent. In this report we introduce a patient with paresthesia and peripheral gangrene. A 62-year old man was admited with headach, burning pain and erythromelalgia in feet and hands associated with symmetrical reddinenig and mottling of toes and fingers (Figure 1-A). In physical examination the patient was not severely ill at diagnosis, and the karnofsky score was 85, and splenomegaly was not detectable. Patient also had gangrene in forth toe of the rigth feet (Figure 1-B). Laboratory findings of patient included: platelet counts: 1,600,000/µl, leukocyte count: 18000/µl, hemoglobin level: 15.2 gr/dl. In peripheral blood smear there was severe platelet aggregation and platelet anisocytosis with megathrombocytes, and variouse morphologic abnormality in size and shape of red cells. Bone marrow aspiration findings were, increased marrow cellularity, marked megakaryocytic hyperplasia, with morphologically bizarre megakaryocytes, nuclear pleomorphism and clustering of megakaryocytes. The diagnosis of essential thrombocytemia was established by being posetive of JAK2 mutation.
Figure 1: symmetrical reddinenig and mottling of toes and fingers (A), and toe gangrene (B)