| Literature DB >> 29492430 |
Mika Nakanishi1, Eri Oota1, Takehiro Soeda1, Kaoru Masumo1, Yukihiko Tomita1, Takeshi Kato1, Toshihiro Imanishi1.
Abstract
A 66-year-old man with thrombocytosis was brought to our hospital to undergo removal of a left ventricular thrombus. He had developed cerebral infarction 6 days before presenting to the hospital and suffered from right incomplete hemiparalysis. Blood tests on admission revealed his platelet count to be 124.3 × 104/μl. The urgent removal operation was performed under general anesthesia. For carrying out extracorporeal circulation (ECC), approximately three times as much heparin as expected was needed, as well as antithrombin III (AT III) administration. This met the definition of heparin resistance. The thrombus was removed and surgical left ventricular reconstruction was performed. Aspirin and warfarin were initiated on postoperative day 5. A bone marrow biopsy was performed on postoperative day 8, which revealed hypercellular marrow with megakaryocyte proliferation, and the patient was diagnosed as having essential thrombocythemia (ET). Although hydroxycarbamide administration started on postoperative day 10, his platelet count increased to 290.7 × 104/μl on postoperative day 13. The counts descended gradually, and on postoperative day 34, his platelet count reached the normal range and he was discharged from the hospital. In the perioperative period, his new neurologic abnormality did not appear. Addition of heparin, administration of AT III, and coating the cardiopulmonary bypass circuit with heparin or macromolecular polymer prevented clot formation and enabled safe ECC in a patient with ET and a high platelet count.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency cardiac surgery; Essential thrombocythemia; Heparin resistance
Year: 2016 PMID: 29492430 PMCID: PMC5814666 DOI: 10.1186/s40981-016-0063-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JA Clin Rep ISSN: 2363-9024
Fig. 1Left ventricular thrombus observed by transesophageal echocardiography under general anesthesia. The thrombus () was mobile and was located in the septal areas
Fig. 2Changes in ACT and AT III. More heparin than expected was needed to carry out extracorporeal circulation. The patient’s AT III levels decreased during surgery, and administration of AT III was needed. Less protamine than expected was needed to neutralize the heparin effect. ACT activated coagulation time, AT III antithrombin III, CPB cardiopulmonary bypass