Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis (Apr 2019)

Primary Thrombophilia in Mexico XIII: Localization of the Thrombotic Events in Mexican Mestizos With the Sticky Platelet Syndrome

  • Brizeida Azamar-Solis MD,
  • Yahveth Cantero-Fortiz MD,
  • Juan Carlos Olivares-Gazca MD,
  • Jesús Mauricio Olivares-Gazca MD,
  • Gisela Berenice Gómez-Cruz MD,
  • Iván Murrieta-Álvarez MD,
  • Guillermo J. Ruiz-Delgado MD, FACP,
  • Guillermo J. Ruiz-Argüelles MD, MACP, FRCP(Glasg), DSc (Hon)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1076029619841700
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25

Abstract

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The sticky platelet syndrome (SPS) is a common cause of both arterial and venous thrombosis, being a dominant autosomal disease with qualitative platelet alterations and familial occurrence. It is characterized by platelet hyperreactivity with increased platelet aggregability in response to low concentrations of platelet agonists: epinephrine, adenosine diphosphate, or both. The clinical manifestations involve venous or arterial thrombosis, recurrent pregnancy loss, and fetal growth retardation. To analyze the localization of the thrombotic episodes in a cohort of Mexican mestizo patients with SPS. Between 1992 and 2016, 86 Mexican mestizo patients with SPS as the single thrombophilic condition were prospectively identified; all of them had a history of thrombosis. There were 15 males and 71 females. The thrombotic episodes were arterial in 26 cases and venous in 60 (70%). Arterial thrombosis was mainly pulmonary thromboembolism, whereas venous thromboses were identified most frequently in the lower limbs. Mexican mestizo population with SPS is mainly female; the type I of the condition is the most frequent; both arterial and venous thrombosis can occur, and they are mainly pulmonary embolism and lower limbs venous thrombosis, respectively.