| Literature DB >> 26250584 |
Masako Ichiyama1, Shouichi Ohga2, Masayuki Ochiai3, Kotaro Fukushima4, Masataka Ishimura5, Michiko Torio6, Michiyo Urata7, Taeko Hotta8, Dongchon Kang9, Toshiro Hara10.
Abstract
Severe protein C-deficiency is a rare heritable thrombophilia of the newborn. Infants with biallelic PROC mutations present purpura fulminans and intracranial thromboembolism, while the prenatal onset of mutated heterozygotes remains unclear. We herewith present the first case of fetal ventriculomegaly and neonatal stroke associated with heterozygous PROC mutation. The infant was born to a healthy mother at 38 gestational weeks. The fetal growth had been normal, but the routine ultrasound screening had indicated mild hydrocephalus at 28 weeks of gestation. He developed convulsions two days after birth. Computed tomography of the brain revealed multiple hemorrhagic infarctions and ventriculomegaly. Dissociated levels of the plasma activity between protein C (21%) and protein S (42%) reached to determine the heterozygote of PROC c.574_576delAAG, a common thrombophilic predisposition in Asian ancestries. PC-mutant heterozygotes may have a limited high risk of cerebral thromboembolism during the perinatal course.Entities:
Keywords: Heritable thrombophilia; Perinatal stroke; Ventriculomegaly
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26250584 DOI: 10.1016/j.braindev.2015.07.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Dev ISSN: 0387-7604 Impact factor: 1.961