Trousseau's syndrome: multiple definitions and multiple mechanisms
University of California San Diego
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Abstract
In 1865, Armand Trousseau noted that unexpected or migratory thrombophlebitis could be a forewarning of an occult visceral malignancy. An analysis by Sack and colleagues in 1977 extended the term Trousseau's syndrome to include chronic disseminated intravascular coagulopathy associated with microangiopathy, verrucous endocarditis, and arterial emboli in patients with cancer, often occurring with mucin-positive carcinomas. In recent times the term has been ascribed to various clinical situations, ranging all the way from these classic descriptions to any kind of coagulopathy occurring in the setting of any kind of malignancy. These multiple definitions of Trousseau's syndrome are partly the consequence of…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Medicine
- Coagulopathy
- Thrombotic microangiopathy
- Malignancy
- Thrombosis
- Cancer
- Pathology
- Surgery
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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