1 Department of Hepatology, King's College Hospital, Denmark Hill, London
SE5 9RS, UK
2 Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery, King's College Hospital, Denmark
Hill, London SE5 9RS, UK
Correspondence to: Dr S C Ng E-mail: siewchienng{at}yahoo.co.uk
EhlersDanlos syndrome type IV can escape diagnosis until the development of catastrophic complications in adult life.
CASE HISTORY
A Pakistani woman aged 23 years experienced sudden chest pain and dyspnoea five days after caesarean section. Physical examination, chest radiography and arterial blood gas measurements showed nothing abnormal. She was anti-coagulated for risk of thromboembolic disease. Six hours later she reported right subscapular pain; her abdomen was now tense. Haemoglobin was 6.2 g/dL, platelets 119 x 109/L, bilirubin 45 µmol/L, alanine aminotransferase 102 iu/L, alkaline phosphatase 657 iu/L; prothrombin time was normal. An abdominal tap yielded frank blood and emergency laparotomy revealed a large subcapsular liver haematoma (no known antecedent trauma). Initial packing of the liver did not control the bleeding and she required a second laparotomy by a liver surgeon. On day two she was stable enough to allow transfer to our liver intensive care unit. Biphasic liver CT (Figure 1) showed tightly packed liver with abnormal perfusion of the parenchyma and intrahepatic haematomas. Bilateral spontaneous pneumothoraces then developed, requiring chest drains. During further laparotomy there was uncontrolled bleeding from the liver, because of complete decapsulation. Abnormal fragility of the bowel and mesentery was noted. Thought was given to total hepatectomy with portocaval shunt and listing for transplantation, but the tissues were considered unsuitable for successful transplantation and further efforts were concentrated on achieving haemostasis. She became profoundly hypotensive and had an asystolic cardiac arrest. After cardiac massage, the suprahepatic inferior vena cava was found to have completely avulsed from her liver. Further resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful.
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Spontaneous hepatic rupture, which is most often associated with a liver tumour together with coagulopathy,1 is not a common feature of EDS.2 The abnormality in EDS type IV is a defect of the collagen most abundant in the skin, blood vessels and gastrointestinal tractnamely, type III.3 Affected patients who undergo surgery are at risk of postoperative arterial rupture, perhaps because surgical trauma increases collagenase activity.4 In childhood, complications are rare but a quarter of patients have their first complication by age 20 and more than three-quarters by age 40. The risk of lethal complications in EDS type IV seems to be augmented by pregnancy, and is especially high during labour and early postpartum. In the largest survey of 'classic' EDS type IV, fatal pregnancy-related complications developed in 915% of women who became pregnant;5 therefore, the desirability of conception must be considered. Because the syndrome is inherited in autosomal dominant fashion genetic screening is important, and in the family discussed here all five of the patient's siblings are being tested. In the mother and sister, both of whom have a history of easy bruising, tests have already shown fibroblasts to be free from a collagen III defect. The child will need to be tested.
This case illustrates the difficulties in early diagnosis of EDS type IV. Surgeons who encounter extreme tissue fragility at operation should think of connective tissue disorder. Although no specific therapies delay the onset of complications in these patients, awareness of the clinical signs and knowledge of the diagnosis may influence reproductive counselling, the management of pregnancy and surgical interventions.
REFERENCES
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