| Literature DB >> 26207097 |
Takao Konishi1, Tadashi Yamamoto2, Naohiro Funayama2, Beni Yamaguchi2, Seiichiro Sakurai2, Hiroshi Nishihara3, Koko Yamazaki2, Yusuke Kashiwagi2, Yasuki Sasa2, Mitsuru Gima2, Hideichi Tanaka2, Daisuke Hotta2, Kenjiro Kikuchi2.
Abstract
A 43-year-old woman recipient of a bare metal coronary stent during an acute anterior myocardial infarction was repeatedly hospitalized with recurrent stent thrombosis (ST) over the following 3 years. Emergent coronary angiography showed a thrombus in the in-stent segment of the proximal left anterior descending artery. We repeatedly aspirated the thrombus, which immediately reformed multiple times. The discontinuation of heparin and administration of thrombolytics and argatroban, followed by repeated balloon dilatations, ended the formation of new thrombi. The patient was found to be allergic to nickel, protein S deficient and carrier of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia antibody. We discuss this case in the context of a) literature pertaining to acute coronary syndromes in the young, and b) the detailed investigations needed to identify thrombotic risk factors. Steroids may be effective to prevent recurrent ST caused by stent allergy.Entities:
Keywords: Heparin-induced thrombosis; Metal allergy; Protein S deficiency; Stent thrombosis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26207097 PMCID: PMC4512022 DOI: 10.1186/s12959-015-0055-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb J ISSN: 1477-9560
Fig. 1Coronary angiography. a. Right anterior oblique and caudal view. b. Left anterior oblique and cranial view. A stent thrombosis is visible (arrowheads) in the in-stent segment of the proximal left anterior descending artery
Fig. 2Intravascular ultrasound. Fibrous thrombi are visible in the in-stent segment of the pLAD artery
Fig. 3Aspirated thrombi. a. Several large thrombi (arrow) were aspirated during PCI and preserved in physiologic saline inside the aspiration device. b. Extracted thrombi on a Petri dish
Fig. 4Histological examination of aspirated thrombi. a. High-power (original magnification 400×) microphotograph showing the infiltration of inflammatory cells in aspirated fibrin-rich thrombus as observed after haematoxylin and eosin staining. b. High-power (original magnification 400×) microphotograph showing the eosinophilic infiltration as observed after Giemsa staining (between arrowheads)
Fig. 5Evolution of platelet count. The platelet count decreased after each administration of heparin for emergent PCI or follow-up coronary angiography. However, the fall in platelet count was not recognized until the 3rd hospitalization for ACS as the baseline platelet count was high and the lowest count during each admission remained within normal limits. The patient received iron intravenously nearly every month for 3 years for profuse menstrual bleeding, which might have activated circulating HIT antibodies. This patient received 10,000 IU of total unfractionated heparin during PCI on the third ACS, higher than during previous angiographies or PCI (1,500–6,000 IU). ACS = acute coronary syndrome; CA = coronary angiography; UFH = unfractionated heparin; Plt = platelet
Plasma factors influencing the thrombophilic propensity
| Test | Values (percent) | Normal range (percent) |
|---|---|---|
| Total protein S antigen | 56 | 65–135 |
| Free protein S antigen | 50 | 60–150 |
| Protein S activity | 35 | 60–150 |
| Protein C activity | 89 | 64–146 |
| Anti-thrombin III activity | 95 | 80–130 |
| Factor X | 81 | 70–130 |