Case Reports | 2019

Spontaneous vulvar hematoma as a rare manifestation of congenital hypofibrinogenemia. Case report

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Introduction: Congenital fibrinogen disorders are rare conditions in which there are quantitative and qualitative alterations of factor I; the vast majority of patients are asymptomatic. Case presentation: A 19-year-old female patient with a history of congenital hypofibrinogenemia presented with spontaneous vulvar hematoma along with hypotension, tachycardia, stupor and hematoma of 20cm in the right labium majus. On admission, the young woman had hemoglobin 6.6 g/dL, fibrinogen 74 mg/dL and prolonged clotting times. She received red blood cells transfusion and cryoprecipitates, followed by surgical drainage and intravenous fibrinogen replacement, adjusting the dose according to fibrinogen levels in plasma. The patient presented progressive improvement without hemorrhagic recurrence and fibrinogen levels within the target values until hospital discharge. Discussion: Afibrinogenemia and hypofibrin\xadogenemia are part of the quantitative factor I disorders; in the first case, there is total absence of circulating fibrinogen, and in the second case the levels are below 150 mg/dL. Sponta\xadneous vulvar hematoma as a severe hemorrhagic manifestation is not frequent in symptomatic patients; its treatment is based on fibrinogen replacement in an individualized manner and surgical management when required. Conclusion: Hypofibrinogenemia is a rare dis\xadease, and fibrinogen replacement is one of the mainstays of treatment.

Volume 5
Pages 155-161
DOI 10.15446/cr.v5n2.78952
Language English
Journal Case Reports

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