TY - JOUR
T1 - Abnormal hemostasis in children with vascular anomalies, part I
T2 - Thrombocytopenias among different vascular anomalies
AU - Tole, Soumitra
AU - Price, Victoria
AU - Pope, Elena
AU - Powell, Julie
AU - David, Michèle
AU - Zwicker, Kelley
AU - Kendrick, Victoria
AU - Malic, Claudia
AU - John, Philip R.
AU - Somers, Gino R.
AU - Dubois, Josée
AU - Brandão, Leonardo R.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019
PY - 2020/12
Y1 - 2020/12
N2 - Long before the classification of vascular anomalies from the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA) provided a framework to differentiate vascular anomalies, otherwise known as vascular birthmarks, it was recognized that patients with such lesions can present with acute life-threatening hemostatic and/or thrombotic complications, as well as chronic long-standing bleeding or thrombotic issues. Scenarios such as a rapidly growing vascular lesion with severe acute thrombocytopenia, a visceral hemorrhagic lesion, a lesion associated with repetitive and painful superficial thrombosis, and cases of unprovoked or post-procedural fatal pulmonary embolism highlight the wide spectrum of manifestations of abnormal coagulation in patients with vascular anomalies. The separation of vascular anomalies into two distinct groups, vascular tumors and vascular malformations, was followed by the characterization that their respective coagulopathies were due to either a derangement of platelets or to a disequilibrium of the patient's coagulation/fibrinolytic process. This configuration of coagulopathies will be the foundation for this two-chapter review series. In the initial review, coagulopathies where thrombocytopenia is the main feature will be characterized, whereas the second review will focus on vascular malformations that have a coagulation disorder secondary to some degree of coagulation consumption and/or fibrinolytic pathway derangement.
AB - Long before the classification of vascular anomalies from the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA) provided a framework to differentiate vascular anomalies, otherwise known as vascular birthmarks, it was recognized that patients with such lesions can present with acute life-threatening hemostatic and/or thrombotic complications, as well as chronic long-standing bleeding or thrombotic issues. Scenarios such as a rapidly growing vascular lesion with severe acute thrombocytopenia, a visceral hemorrhagic lesion, a lesion associated with repetitive and painful superficial thrombosis, and cases of unprovoked or post-procedural fatal pulmonary embolism highlight the wide spectrum of manifestations of abnormal coagulation in patients with vascular anomalies. The separation of vascular anomalies into two distinct groups, vascular tumors and vascular malformations, was followed by the characterization that their respective coagulopathies were due to either a derangement of platelets or to a disequilibrium of the patient's coagulation/fibrinolytic process. This configuration of coagulopathies will be the foundation for this two-chapter review series. In the initial review, coagulopathies where thrombocytopenia is the main feature will be characterized, whereas the second review will focus on vascular malformations that have a coagulation disorder secondary to some degree of coagulation consumption and/or fibrinolytic pathway derangement.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.thromres.2019.06.004
DO - 10.1016/j.thromres.2019.06.004
M3 - Article
C2 - 31221393
AN - SCOPUS:85067231704
SN - 0049-3848
VL - 196
SP - 626
EP - 634
JO - Thrombosis Research
JF - Thrombosis Research
ER -