| Literature DB >> 12953809 |
Yasuo Hirayama1, Sumio Sakamaki, Yasushi Tsuji, Tamotsu Sagawa, Norihiro Takayanagi, Hiroki Chiba, Takuya Matsunaga, Junji Kato, Yoshiro Niitsu.
Abstract
Death by bloodletting among patients with factitious anemia has never been reported to our knowledge. We report the first known case. A 25-year-old woman with severe iron deficiency anemia confessed her habit of bloodletting at her first visit to our hospital, in March 1998. We prescribed oral iron and referred her to a psychiatrist. The diagnosis was borderline personality disorder. The psychiatrist began counseling the patient and prescribed a major tranquilizer. The patient's method of bloodletting was to insert an 18-gauge needle without syringe into her vein after inducing congestion in her arm. This method was considered to involve risk of death, because once the patient fell into a faint caused by blood loss, the bloodletting could not be stopped. Although we attempted to persuade the patient to stop bloodletting by this method, she died after self-bloodletting in September 1999. It is not known whether the death was intentional suicide or an accident.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12953809 DOI: 10.1007/BF02983383
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hematol ISSN: 0925-5710 Impact factor: 2.490