Bernard-Soulier Syndrome


Risk

  • Estimated to be <1 in 1 million persons, but may be higher due to misdiagnosis and underreporting

  • Rare: Approximately 100 cases reported in literature

Perioperative Risks

  • Severe hemorrhage out of proportion to plt count

  • Transfusion reactions

Worry About

  • Severe periop hemorrhage

  • Limited availability of blood products

  • Concurrent medical conditions (e.g., uremia, liver disease) or medications (NSAIDs, heparin, and antiplatelet agents) contributing to bleeding

Overview

  • Coagulopathy characterized by defects in plt number and function due to an absence or abnormality in plt membrane glycoprotein receptor complex GPIb-IX-V, a four-protein complex responsible for initiating plt adhesion at sites of vascular injury and binding Von Willebrand factor

  • Defect in primary hemostasis; mucocutaneous bleeding; often, the bleeding is more severe than expected for the pt’s particular plt count

  • Clinical phenotype severity varies; manifestations range from easy bruising, purpura, epistaxis, gingival bleeding, and menorrhagia to hematuria, GI bleeding, and fatal hemorrhage

  • Severe bleeding associated with menses, trauma, and certain surgical procedures (e.g., tonsillectomy, appendectomy, splenectomy, dental extraction)

  • Diagnosed by prolonged bleeding time, presence of a small number of very large plt on blood smears (macrothrombocytopenia), reduced plt counts (20,000–100,000), and absence of RIPA

Etiology

  • Autosomal recessive inheritance pattern; a wide spectrum of clinical manifestation based on the degree of glycoprotein complex dysfunction.

  • Individual genes have been identified for each of the proteins in the complex and may be the target for future therapy: 17p12 (GPIba), 22q11.2 (GPIbb), 3q29 (GPV), and 3q21 (GPIX).

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