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Acute aortic intraluminal thrombus with embolisation and lower-limb ischaemia following intravenous iron sucrose infusion reaction.

Iva OkajMenaka PaiJohn HarlockTheodore Earl Warkentin
Published in: BMJ case reports (2023)
A woman in her 50s developed iron deficiency anaemia. Her medical history included hypertension, asthma and remote postpartum pulmonary embolism. There was a strong family history of atherosclerosis. After receiving intravenous iron sucrose (500 mg), she developed vomiting and large-volume diarrhoea, followed by diaphoresis, back pain, haemoconcentration (haematocrit increase, 0.242 to 0.326), leucocytosis and platelet count decline. Myocardial infarction was ruled out and the truncal pain subsided. However, 2 days postdischarge, she was diagnosed with aortic intraluminal thrombus (ILT) with embolisation into the lower extremities. The limbs were salvaged by emergency embolectomies and fasciotomies. Acute aortic ILT is a rare disorder that has not been previously reported as a complication of parenteral iron therapy. We postulate that acute intravascular volume losses (vomiting and diarrhoea) with resulting haemoconcentration and catecholamine-associated platelet activation and consumption, in a patient with subclinical aortic atherosclerosis, triggered acute aortic ILT presenting as lower-limb ischaemia.
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