Thrombocytopenia
Thrombocytopenia
Thrombocytopenia
Marina M. Perez-Fournier
Neonatal-Perinatal Fellow
MHMC
Definition
z Immune
z Infectious
z Genetic
z Drug-induced
z Increased peripheral consumption (DIC, NEC,
hypersplenism)
z Placental insufficiency
z Miscellaneous
Thrombocytopenia causes
z Clinical manifestations:
– severe, generalized petechiae
– rash or purpura
– or normal at birth and may develop symptoms
and signs during 2-3 day post-partum.
– severe complication is intracranial hemorrhage
which is seen in approximately 10-15% cases and
half of these occurs in utero with neuro-
developmental sequele
Neonatal Alloimmune Thrombocytopenia (NAIT)
Familial thrombocytopenia's
z Bernard Soulier syndrome
z May-Hogglin anomaly
z Paris-Trousseau thrombocytopenia
z X-linked recessive thrombocytopenia
Genetic Associations with Thrombocytopenia
z Thrombosis –
associated with an indwelling catheter,
extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO),
valvular cardiac disease, renal vein thrombosis.
z Fetal
z Early onset (first 72 hours of life)
z Late onset (after 72 hours of life)
Causes of fetal thrombocytopenia
z Alloimmune
z Congenital infection (e.g. CMV, toxoplasma, rubella)
z Aneuploidy (e.g. trisomies 18, 13, 21, or triploidy)
z Autoimmune (e.g. ITP, SLE)
z Severe rhesus disease
z Congenital/inherited (e.g. Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome)
Causes of early onset thrombocytopenia
z Late-onset sepsis
z NEC
z Congenital infection (e.g. CMV, toxoplasma, rubella)
z Autoimmune
z Kasabach-Merritt Phenomenon
z Metabolic disease (e.g. propionic and methylmalonic acidaemia)
z Congenital/inherited (eg TAR, CAMT)
Physical exam