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24-Jul-2020
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Arch Hellen Med, 37(4), July-August 2020, 532-535 CASE REPORT Enoxaparin-induced skin necrosis without heparin-induced thrombocytopenia M. Tampaki,1 V. Antoniadou,1 C. Klonaris,2 M. Samarkos1 |
We report the case of a 73-year-old female who presented skin necrosis at enoxaparin injection sites after 11 days of treatment. We diagnosed enoxaparin-induced skin necrosis on clinical grounds, as the patient declined biopsy. Fondaparinux was substituted for the enoxaparin, and the lesions were managed conservatively. At follow-up the necrotic lesions had healed to a large degree. This case is uncommon in that laboratory findings excluded the presence of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), and therefore the skin necrosis should be attributed to other mechanisms, such as type III hypersensitivity with vasculitis, or repeated local trauma and hemorrhage.
Key words: Anticoagulants, Drug eruptions, Low molecular weight heparin, Skin diseases.