| Literature DB >> 36092746 |
Fabienne Aurora1, Anita Arasaretnam2, Andrew Hobkirk2.
Abstract
Background: Acute Leukaemias are haematological disorders characterised by the proliferation of immature white blood cells in the bone marrow and/or peripheral blood. Oral manifestations of leukaemia are common and may be the first sign of the disease. The clinical presentation of these Acute Leukaemias may include neutropenic sepsis, hyperviscocity and coagulopathy which confer a potential morbidity and mortality. Clinicians must be able to recognise this pattern of presentation. Case report: We report a 34-year-old female who was referred to the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery department with acute dental pain and pericoronitis. She subsequently had a simple dental extraction but re-presented with a bleeding socket that did not respond to local treatment. Investigation of this led to a diagnosis of Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia (APL). She was admitted under the care of the haematology team for urgent, life-saving, treatment. Conclusions: Early diagnosis and treatment of the Acute Leukaemias can be life saving. The oral manifestations of disease are common and may be the first sign. Clinicians must be able to recognise this pattern of presentation and arrange urgent investigation and specialist management. Clinical/CPD relevance: This case report discusses leukaemia and highlights the important role General Dental Practitioners can play in early diagnosis. We frame a safe approach to managing these patients in a typical case. Whilst this disease subtype is rare, the learning points can be universally applied.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Diagnosis; Leukaemia; Oral manifestations; Oral surgery
Year: 2022 PMID: 36092746 PMCID: PMC9440743 DOI: 10.1186/s42269-022-00915-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull Natl Res Cent ISSN: 1110-0591
Fig. 1Orthopantomogram taken at RSCH 2WW clinic showing partially over-erupted UR8
FBC, Blood Film, Coag, Fib, D-dimer, CRP, Ferritin, LDH
| Full blood count and blood film | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Haemoglobin | 41 | g/L | 115–165 |
| White cell count | 9.7 | 109/L | 4–10 |
| Neutrophil count | 0.3 3.0% | 109/L | 2–7 |
| Platelet count | 18 | 109/L | 150–410 |
| Haem consultant blood film comment: morphology consistent with APL (hypergranular promyelocytes)—urgent haem review arranged | |||
| INR | 1.6 | 0.8–1.2 | |
| APTT | 40.8 | secs | 24.8–37.4 |
| APTT ratio | 1.38 | 0.87–1.15 | |
| Prothrombin time | 22.9 | secs | 11–17 |
| Fibrinogen | 1.6 | g/L | 1.8–4.5 |
| D-Dimers assay | > 20.00 | ug/mL | 0–0.5 |
| Serum C-reactive protein | 105 | mg/L | 0–5 |
| Serum ferritin | 694 | ug/L | 13–150 |
| Serum LDH | 998 | iu/L | 240–480 |
Fig. 2Diagnostic Bone Marrow Aspirate (× 50 Power): Hypercellular marrow, abnormal promyelocytes with azurophilic granulation, some containing Auer rods (arrow)