Fabry disease is a rare disease, defined as an X-linked lysosomal deposition disease that presents with multisystemic symptoms, including vascular impairment with thrombotic events. A 57-year-old female patient diagnosed with Fabry disease 11 years previously, presented with hyperhidrosis, hypoacusis, and angiokeratoma on the hands. Her previous pathological history included an episode of ischemic stroke before the age of 40 years and chronic acute thrombosis in the right lower limb, 1 year previously, which had been treated with stent angioplasty, with temporary improvement followed by recent relapse of the condition. Thrombotic events fit the typical symptoms of Fabry disease and are caused by deposition of globotriaosylceramide in the vascular endothelium, constituting a prothrombotic state and explaining the recurrence of symptoms and arterial thrombosis in the lower limb.
CITATION STYLE
Moraes, A. O., Zubiolo, T. F. M., Brito, A. F. B., Belentani, J., Neto, J. F. S., Dos Santos, G. N., … Silva, L. G. (2020). Recurrent arterial thrombosis in a patient with fabry disease: Case report. Jornal Vascular Brasileiro, 19, 1–5. https://doi.org/10.1590/1677-5449.190096
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