Arterial thrombus associated with the surgery can be seen in postsplenectomy cases, but there is no clear data in patients diagnosed with immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). A 52-year-old female patient was admitted to the emergency department due to ecchymotic skin changes. Her initial platelet count was 6000/mm 3 ; after two courses of high dose-dexamethasone, intravenous immunoglobulin and rituximab, splenectomy was planned for the patient whose platelet count was again <40 000/mm 3 . She presented to the emergency department with complaints of pain and pallor in the right arm in the second week of follow-up. There was a mural thrombus that caused approximately 50% stenosis in the lumen at the division site in the aortic arch, proximal of the right subclavian artery. The patient's clinic was found to be associated with the presence of an aberrant right subclavian artery and postoperative thrombocytosis/inflammation after elimination other prothrombotic conditions.
Keyphrases
- emergency department
- high dose
- case report
- low dose
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- primary care
- newly diagnosed
- chronic pain
- oxidative stress
- patients undergoing
- randomized controlled trial
- pulmonary embolism
- chronic kidney disease
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- spinal cord injury
- peripheral blood
- coronary artery bypass
- prognostic factors
- machine learning
- deep learning
- neuropathic pain
- wound healing
- study protocol
- postoperative pain