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PSEUDOHEMOPHILIA OR CHRONIC THROMBASTHENIA
CHARLES W. McLAUGHLIN, Jr., M.D.
Arch Surg. 1949;58(5):635-645.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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THE CONDITIONS under discussion are those which have been called in the literature "pseudohemophilia or chronic hereditary thrombasthenia." These two dyscrasias were originally described nearly forty years ago, but it has only been in recent years that a clear differentiation has been drawn between the two entities and their characteristics more generally understood.
Glantzmann1 in 1918 described a new diathesis occurring in both sexes characterized by bleeding of a purpuric type with hemorrhage from the mucous membranes and beneath the skin. In the original series the bleeding time, clotting time and platelet count were all reported to be normal. The clot retraction was delayed or absent. To this condition he gave the name "chronic hereditary hemorrhagic thrombasthenia" since he considered the platelets to be qualitatively defective. Subsequently cases considered to be in this group were reported by Van der Zande,2 Rosenthal,3 Little and Ayres,4 Roskam5
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
OMAHA
Footnotes
Read at the Fifty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the Western Surgical Association, St. Louis, Dec. 2, 1948.
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