Very severe aplastic anemia appearing after thymectomy.

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Abstract

Aplastic anemia is a rare complication of thymoma and is extremely infrequent after thymectomy. We present a case of a 60-year-old woman with very severe aplastic anemia appearing sixteen months after thymectomy for a thymoma. She underwent thymectomy for a thymoma in April 2000. Preoperative examination revealed no hematologic abnormality. About sixteen months after the operation, she was readmitted because of pancytopenia with cough and fever. Bone marrow aspiration revealed a very severe hypoplasia in all the three cell lines with over 80% fatty tissue, and chest CT revealed no recurrence of thymoma. Her aplastic anemia had responded to cyclosporine A and granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF).

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Park, C. Y., Kim, H. J., Kim, Y. J., Park, Y. H., Lee, J. W., Min, W. S., & Kim, C. C. (2003). Very severe aplastic anemia appearing after thymectomy. The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine, 18(1), 61–63. https://doi.org/10.3904/kjim.2003.18.1.61

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