Abstract

IntroductionAggressive, recurrent embolisms require accurate etiologic diagnosis. We describe the case of a 69-year-old Italian Caucasian woman with recurrent arterial embolisms in whom several sources and triggers of thrombosis were detected.Case presentationThe patient, a 69-year-old Italian Caucasian woman, presented with a systemic embolism that was initially attributed to atrial fibrillation. The recurrence of embolisms despite anti-thrombotic therapy prompted a re-evaluation of the clinical presentation. New potential causes of thrombosis emerged in this patient, including thrombocytosis associated with the JAK2 V617F mutation and the very rare mural thrombosis of the descending aorta. A mural thrombus in the pulmonary artery was detected contiguous with the aortic mural thrombosis, raising the possibility of a clinically silent ductus Botalli as the initiating event. The patient was treated with warfarin, aspirin, hydroxyurea, and surgery.ConclusionsThe diagnosis was achieved via systematic use of imaging procedures and reconsideration of blood tests performed to explore the diagnosis of thrombosis. This allowed a deeper and more detailed analysis of the case beyond the conventional approach, which would have aimed to identify one cause for the condition at hand, in this case, atrial fibrillation. The broader approach that we used resulted in the diagnosis of multiple embolisms from multiple sites and multiple causes.

Highlights

  • Aggressive, recurrent embolisms require accurate etiologic diagnosis

  • The diagnosis was achieved via systematic use of imaging procedures and reconsideration of blood tests performed to explore the diagnosis of thrombosis

  • The broader approach that we used resulted in the diagnosis of multiple embolisms from multiple sites and multiple causes

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Summary

Conclusions

Many cases similar to the one presented here are encountered during common clinical practice, in which the diagnosis cannot definitively be proven but is the most likely possibility. The diagnosis was achieved via systematic use of imaging procedures and reconsideration of blood tests that explored thrombosis. This allowed a deeper and more detailed analysis of the case beyond the conventional approach that would have aimed to identify one cause for the condition at hand, in this case, atrial fibrillation. Author details 1Department of Medical Sciences and Biotechnology, Vascular Medicine and Atherothrombosis Laboratory, Sapienza University of Rome, corso della Repubblica 79, IT-04100 Latina, Italy. Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests

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