Trousseau's syndrome.

N Callander, SI Rapaport - Western Journal of Medicine, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
N Callander, SI Rapaport
Western Journal of Medicine, 1993ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
We report 4 cases of Trousseau's syndrome, in which spontaneous recurrent or migratory
venous thromboses, arterial emboli caused by nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis, or both,
develop in a patient with a recognized or occult malignant tumor. The clinical course of 3 of
the patients emphasizes a key point: The occurrence for no known reason of thromboses
preventable by anticoagulation therapy with heparin but not with warfarin sodium should
alert a physician to focus diagnostic efforts on uncovering an underlying malignant lesion …
Abstract
We report 4 cases of Trousseau's syndrome, in which spontaneous recurrent or migratory venous thromboses, arterial emboli caused by nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis, or both, develop in a patient with a recognized or occult malignant tumor. The clinical course of 3 of the patients emphasizes a key point: The occurrence for no known reason of thromboses preventable by anticoagulation therapy with heparin but not with warfarin sodium should alert a physician to focus diagnostic efforts on uncovering an underlying malignant lesion. Thromboses may occur months to years before the tumor is discovered, and a thorough negative initial examination does not obviate the need for a continuing search. Patients with Trousseau's syndrome have persistent low-grade intravascular coagulation, and therapy with heparin should be continued indefinitely. Stopping heparin therapy for even a day may permit a new thrombosis to develop. Immunostaining a biopsy specimen from 1 patient provided evidence that 2 properties of a neoplastic lesion are required for the syndrome to develop: The malignant cells express surface membrane tissue factor, and structural features of the tumor permit the malignant cells or vesicles it sheds to be exposed to circulating blood.
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