Original Article

"Neurologic complications in Hemophilia: A study in 214 cases "

Abstract

Intracranial hemorrhage and entrapment neuropathy are the most serious and disabling complications in hemophilia.The occurance of these neurological complications was studied in 214 hemophiliac patients during a 3 month period. Nine patients (4.2%) suffered intracranial hemorrhage (One epidural and others intracerebral). All of intracranial hemorrhage patients had the sevee form of disease (<1% factor VIII or IX). 6 out of 9 intracranial hemorrhage cases mentioned a history of head trauma. Entrapment neuropathy was presen in 10 patients (femoral neuropathy 5, ulnar n. 3, radial n. 1 median n. 1) all of entropament neuropathy patients described a history of trauma to the extremities. Eight patients in the latter group had severe disease and two patients had moderate disease (1-5%). The proportion of intracranial hemorrhage following head trauma (20% in this series) was greater than other studies. In conclusion, early diagnostic evaluation and replacement therapy may be beneficial in hemophilic patients with trauma.
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IssueVol 39, No 4 (2001) QRcode
SectionOriginal Article(s)
Keywords
Intracranial hemorrhage Neuropathy

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
1.
Ghaffarpoor M, Sharifian R, Mehrabi F, Salehi M. "Neurologic complications in Hemophilia: A study in 214 cases &quot;. Acta Med Iran. 1;39(4):182-184.