Transient visual loss triggered by scuba diving in a patient with a petrous epidermoid and combined thrombotic risk factors.

Pathophysiol Haemost Thromb

Department of Ophthalmology, Medical and Health Sciences Center, Faculty of Medicine, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary.

Published: August 2010

A 25-year-old woman who developed transient neurological abnormalities after scuba diving is reported. The subsequent day she experienced transient left-side monocular blindness. Arterial ocular occlusion in apparently healthy young women is unusual, and a search for the cause of this devastating vascular event is mandatory. Occlusion of the left branch retinal artery, total occlusion of the left internal carotid artery, and a petrous apex epidermoid were found, together with a shortened prothrombin time (INR: 0.73), a slightly elevated serum cholesterol level (6.1 mmol/l) and combined thrombophilia (elevated FVIIIC plus type 2 sticky platelet syndrome). This case underlines the complex mechanism of thromboembolic diseases, and the importance of the acquired trigger (in the present case scuba diving) in addition to the long-term anatomical and biochemical risk factors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000297738DOI Listing

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