Patient's Query
Hello doctor,
My 28-year-old son has JME epilepsy, mostly under control, and also one part Leiden Factor V. He had an accident last year. Broke a few neck bones (hangman's bone) and broke a few backbones, high up nearer the neck. Son is doing pretty well, and he is walking. He has a total blockage on one side of his vertebral artery. Recently he had a scan and has several blood clots in his back. Do clots ever go away? Other than low-dose Aspirin, what to do?
Please help.
Hello,
Welcome to icliniq.com.
The blood clot will not resolve with the aspirin drug. Aspirin is for prophylaxis to prevent further clot formation. For thrombosis, which is a blood clot, he needs to be prescribed Rivaroxaban or Apixaban-like anticoagulant medication. The Factor V Leiden mutation puts you at high risk for the development of thrombosis.
It is a common cause of congenital thrombosis. A thrombus can be resolved by anticoagulation medication. So it will go with drugs. After thrombosis treatment, you need to be given lifelong anticoagulation medication if you are factor V Leiden mutation positive, as per history.
I hope I have answered your question.
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Answered byDr. Goswami Parth Rajendragiri
Medically reviewed byDr. Nithila. A
Same symptoms don't mean you have the same problem. Consult a doctor now!
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