Pediatric Clots - Tiny Troubles
- Definition: Pathological formation of blood clots (thrombi) in arteries or veins in children, obstructing blood flow.
- Pediatric vs. Adult Differences:
- Lower incidence in children.
- Different risk factor profiles (e.g., congenital heart disease, central lines more prominent in peds).
- Developmental hemostasis: different levels of coagulation factors.
- Virchow's Triad (Pediatric Context): 📌 SHE
- Stasis: Immobility, congenital heart disease (CHD) with shunts, Fontan circulation.
- Hypercoagulability: Sepsis, inherited thrombophilias (e.g., Factor V Leiden, Protein C/S deficiency), nephrotic syndrome, malignancy, certain medications (e.g., L-asparaginase).
- Endothelial Injury: Central venous lines (CVL), trauma, surgery, vasculitis.
⭐ Central venous lines are a leading risk factor for VTE in hospitalized children.

Clot Catalysts - Why Kids Clot
Pediatric thrombosis often results from an interplay between underlying genetic predispositions and various acquired conditions that promote clot formation.
Inherited Thrombophilias: These are genetic defects increasing thrombosis risk.
| Condition | Mechanism / Note |
|---|---|
| Factor V Leiden | Activated Protein C (APC) resistance |
| Prothrombin G20210A | ↑ Prothrombin synthesis |
| Protein C Deficiency | Impaired inactivation of FVa & FVIIIa |
| Protein S Deficiency | Reduced Protein C cofactor activity |
| Antithrombin (AT) Deficiency | Reduced inhibition of thrombin & FXa |
Acquired Risk Factors:
- Central Venous Lines (CVL): Most common.
- Sepsis: Systemic inflammation.
- Malignancy: e.g., ALL; L-asparaginase.
- Surgery / Trauma.
- Nephrotic Syndrome: Loses anticoagulants (AT, Protein C/S).
- Antiphospholipid Syndrome (APS).
- Kawasaki Disease: Vasculitis, aneurysms.
- Immobility / Dehydration.
Clot Confirmation - Spotting the Signs
Clinical Presentation (Site-Dependent):
- DVT: Limb swelling, pain, warmth. Neonates: discoloration, edema.
- PE: Sudden dyspnea, chest pain, hypoxia.
- CSVT: Headache, seizures, focal deficits. Neonates: lethargy.
- Arterial: 5 Ps (Pain, Pallor, Pulselessness, Paresthesia, Paralysis); organ ischemia.
- Renal Vein (RVT): Flank mass, hematuria, thrombocytopenia (esp. neonates).
Diagnostic Workup:
- Labs:
- D-dimer: ↑ (High NPV).
- Coagulation Profile: PT, aPTT, Fibrinogen.
- Specific Assays (recurrent/unprovoked): Protein C/S, AT, FVL, Prothrombin G20210A (Timing: ~4-6 weeks post-event, off anticoagulants).
- Imaging:
- DVT: Doppler US.
⭐ Doppler ultrasound is the initial imaging of choice for suspected DVT.
- PE: CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA); V/Q scan.
- CSVT: MR Venography (MRV) / CT Venography (CTV).
- Arterial: Doppler US, CTA/MRA.
- DVT: Doppler US.

Clot Combat - Treatment Tactics
- Core Strategy: Anticoagulation to halt clot growth & prevent recurrence.
Agent Key Features Monitoring LMWH Enoxaparin: 1mg/kg BD (>2mo), 1.5mg/kg BD (<2mo). SC. Anti-Xa levels UFH IV infusion. Rapid onset/offset. aPTT Warfarin Oral. Target INR 2-3. Bridging needed. INR DOACs Dabigatran, Rivaroxaban. Oral. Fixed doses. Growing pediatric use. Minimal/Specific - Thrombolysis (tPA): For severe, life/limb-threatening clots. High bleeding risk.
- Prophylaxis: Crucial for high-risk (central lines, surgery, inherited thrombophilia).
- Special Scenarios:
- Neonatal Thrombosis: Often catheter-related. LMWH is first-line.
- Purpura Fulminans: Urgent anticoagulation (LMWH/UFH), FFP, Protein C.
⭐ LMWH is generally preferred for anticoagulation in children due to predictable pharmacokinetics and subcutaneous administration.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Factor V Leiden is the most common inherited thrombophilia; central venous lines are a key acquired risk.
- Neonatal thrombosis is often linked to umbilical catheters or maternal conditions like Antiphospholipid Syndrome (APS).
- Severe Protein C or S deficiency can present as neonatal purpura fulminans.
- Kawasaki disease poses a risk for coronary artery thrombosis from aneurysms.
- Low Molecular Weight Heparin (LMWH) is the preferred initial anticoagulant in most pediatric thrombotic events.
- Nephrotic syndrome is a significant acquired risk factor due to urinary loss of anticoagulant proteins.
- Always investigate for underlying malignancy or sepsis in unexplained pediatric thrombosis.
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