Zi Wang, Su Mao, Shujie Wang, Wen Zhang, Congwei Jia, Tienan Zhu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Congenital dysfibrinogenemia (CD) and antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) are two distinct thrombotic disorders that can have significant clinical implications, especially in pregnancy. CD is a rare inherited condition caused by mutations in fibrinogen genes, leading to abnormal fibrin polymerization and fibrinolysis, and causes bleeding tendencies, thrombosis and pregnancy complications. APS, an acquired autoimmune disorder, increases the risk of recurrent thrombosis and adverse pregnancy outcomes, such as miscarriages and stillbirths. This report describes a 35-year-old woman with genetically confirmed congenital dysfibrinogenemia (CD) (heterozygous FGG c.1001A>C) who subsequently developed antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). Notably, although lupus anticoagulant and β2GP1-IgM positivity were present since 2017, APS remained undiagnosed until 2023, following her third miscarriage. In retrospect, she fulfilled the Sydney criteria with recurrent early pregnancy loss, persistent antibodies, and livedo reticularis. During her successful pregnancy in 2021, management focused exclusively on CD: fibrinogen levels were monitored (0.47-0.98 g/L), and fibrinogen concentrate was administered during cesarean delivery due to fetal growth restriction. This resulted in a live infant birth, despite the later recognition of placental thrombosis as APS pathology. This case highlights how CD may mask the diagnosis of APS. The aunt's uneventful pregnancy, with the same FGG mutation but no APS, confirms CD's limited obstetric impact. The delayed APS recognition underscores the importance of reevaluating antiphospholipid status in CD patients experiencing new thrombotic or obstetric events. However, the management of combined CD and APS remains theoretical.
期刊介绍:
International Journal of Women''s Health is an international, peer-reviewed, open access, online journal. Publishing original research, reports, editorials, reviews and commentaries on all aspects of women''s healthcare including gynecology, obstetrics, and breast cancer. Subject areas include: Chronic conditions including cancers of various organs specific and not specific to women Migraine, headaches, arthritis, osteoporosis Endocrine and autoimmune syndromes - asthma, multiple sclerosis, lupus, diabetes Sexual and reproductive health including fertility patterns and emerging technologies to address infertility Infectious disease with chronic sequelae including HIV/AIDS, HPV, PID, and other STDs Psychological and psychosocial conditions - depression across the life span, substance abuse, domestic violence Health maintenance among aging females - factors affecting the quality of life including physical, social and mental issues Avenues for health promotion and disease prevention across the life span Male vs female incidence comparisons for conditions that affect both genders.