📖 History
- 35-year-old woman
- Sudden right-sided weakness
- History of blackening of fingers (digital ischemia)
- Two missed abortions
🩺 Examination
- Right-sided focal neurological deficit
- Digital ischemia / finger gangrene
- Features suggestive of arterial thrombosis
🔬 Investigations
- MRI/CT brain → ischemic stroke
- Coagulation profile
- Autoantibody screening
- Antiphospholipid antibody panel
❓ MCQ Question
📋 Brief Case Summary
Young woman with recurrent pregnancy loss, digital ischemia and acute ischemic stroke suggesting an autoimmune hypercoagulable state.
✅ Clickable Answer
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📚 Answer Explanation
This patient has the classic triad of:
- Arterial thrombosis (ischemic stroke)
- Digital ischemia
- Recurrent pregnancy loss
These findings strongly suggest Antiphospholipid Syndrome (APS). Lupus anticoagulant is one of the major antiphospholipid antibodies responsible for thrombosis and recurrent fetal loss.
❌ Why Not Others?
| Option | Reason Incorrect |
|---|---|
| Anti-dsDNA | Marker of SLE, not specific for recurrent thrombosis. |
| Anti-centromere | Associated with limited systemic sclerosis (CREST). |
| Anti-Jo-1 | Associated with polymyositis and interstitial lung disease. |
| Lupus anticoagulant | Classic APS antibody causing thrombosis and miscarriages. |
🩺 Five Brief Case Scenarios
- Young woman with DVT and recurrent miscarriages → APS.
- Stroke before age 40 with positive lupus anticoagulant.
- Digital gangrene with prolonged aPTT.
- SLE patient with pulmonary embolism.
- Three recurrent fetal losses with anticardiolipin positivity.
⚙️ Pathophysiology Simplified
Antiphospholipid antibodies activate platelets, endothelial cells and coagulation pathways, producing a hypercoagulable state that causes arterial thrombosis, venous thrombosis and placental thrombosis.
🔍 Physical Examination Pearls
- Look for livedo reticularis.
- Assess digital ischemia.
- Evaluate focal neurological deficits.
- Check peripheral pulses.
- Search for DVT signs.
🧪 Investigations Choosing Wisely
- Lupus anticoagulant assay.
- Anticardiolipin antibody.
- Anti-β2 glycoprotein-I antibody.
- Repeat testing after 12 weeks.
- Brain MRI for ischemic lesions.
💊 Management
- Acute stroke treatment.
- Long-term anticoagulation.
- Control cardiovascular risk factors.
- Aspirin + LMWH during pregnancy.
- Regular thrombosis surveillance.
🔄 Differential Diagnosis
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
- Inherited thrombophilia
- Vasculitis
- Cardioembolic stroke
- Thromboangiitis obliterans
⚠️ Clinical Pitfalls
- Ignoring recurrent miscarriages.
- Misinterpreting prolonged aPTT as bleeding risk.
- Failing to repeat antibody testing.
- Missing APS in young stroke patients.
- Stopping anticoagulation too early.
💎 Clinical Pearls
- APS = thrombosis + pregnancy morbidity.
- Lupus anticoagulant promotes thrombosis despite prolonged aPTT.
- Young stroke patients require APS evaluation.
- Digital ischemia is a major clue.
- Triple-positive antibodies confer highest risk.
📅 Monitoring & Follow-Up
- Monitor INR if on warfarin.
- Assess recurrent thrombosis.
- Pregnancy surveillance.
- Review antibody profile.
- Annual cardiovascular assessment.
❓ FAQ (Questions with Answers)
- What is APS?
Autoimmune thrombophilia causing thrombosis and pregnancy loss. - Which antibodies are diagnostic?
Lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin and anti-β2 glycoprotein-I. - Why do miscarriages occur?
Placental thrombosis causes fetal loss. - Can APS occur without SLE?
Yes, primary APS exists. - What stroke type occurs?
Ischemic stroke. - What skin finding is classic?
Livedo reticularis. - What vessel types are affected?
Both arteries and veins. - What is catastrophic APS?
Rapid widespread thrombosis affecting multiple organs. - Why repeat antibody testing?
To confirm persistent positivity. - Can APS cause DVT?
Yes, very commonly. - What pregnancy treatment is preferred?
Low-dose aspirin plus LMWH. - Can APS recur?
Yes, recurrence risk is high. - What is the role of warfarin?
Long-term thrombosis prevention. - Which antibody has highest thrombosis risk?
Lupus anticoagulant. - What is the prognosis?
Good with early diagnosis and proper anticoagulation.
📚 Key Guidelines & References
- EULAR Recommendations for APS Management
- 2023 ACR/EULAR APS Classification Criteria
- Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine
- Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine
- UpToDate: Antiphospholipid Syndrome
- ESC Thrombosis Guidelines
🔎 Keywords
Antiphospholipid Syndrome, APS Quiz, Lupus Anticoagulant, Recurrent Miscarriage, Young Stroke, Digital Ischemia, Anticardiolipin Antibody, Autoimmune Thrombosis, Internal Medicine MCQ, Rheumatology Quiz
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