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A case of acquired factor X deficiency with in vivo and in vitro evidence of inhibitor activity directed against factor X.

A 67-year-old woman had symptoms of an upper respiratory tract infection for which she received a five-day course of erythromycin. Epistaxis and gross hematuria subsequently developed, and the patient was found to have a selective Factor X deficiency. She received supportive therapy and prothrombin complex concentrates (Factors II, VII, IX, and X), with subsequent resolution of her transient Factor X deficiency. Her hospital course, however, was complicated by the development of multiple cerebral infarctions. This is the tenth reported case of transient Factor X deficiency not associated with amyloidosis. In seven of the previous cases, as in this patient, the deficiency was associated with a preceding upper respiratory infection. This is the only case, however, with evidence of inhibitory activity in the plasma that was directed toward Factor X.

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