American Society of Hirudotherapy

Neonatal thrombosis.

Research article published in The journal of maternal-fetal & neonatal medicine : the official journal of the European Association of Perinatal Medicine, the Federation of Asia and Oceania Perinatal Societies, the International Society of Perinatal Obstetricians (2020)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Research reportClinical TrialsDrug DevelopmentMakatsariya A et al. · The journal of maternal-fetal & neonatal medicine : the official journal of the European Association of Perinatal Medicine, the Federation of Asia and Oceania Perinatal Societies, the International Society of Perinatal Obstetricians, 2020

Abstract

Neonatal thromboembolism in pediatric patients is a rare but life-threatening condition mainly caused by combinations of at least 2 prothrombotic triggering risk factors such as the central venous lines, septic condition, and prematurity. Other risk factors include asphyxia, dehydration, liver dysfunction, inflammation, and maternal condition. Neonatal hemostatic system is different from one of the older children and adults. Coagulation proteins do not cross the placenta but are synthesized in the fetus from an early stage. In the term neonate, concentrations of several procoagulant proteins, particularly the vitamin K dependent and contact factors are reduced when compared with adults. Conversely, levels of antithrombin, heparin cofactor II and protein C and S are low at birth and fibrinolysis system is characterized by the decreased level of plasminogen and alpha-1-antiplasmin, increased tissue plasminogen activator. These features all tend to be gestational dependent and are more present in the preterm infant. Primarily in this context neonates appear to be at a higher risk of thrombosis than older children. Thrombotic complications reach their peak in the group of children born at 22-27 weeks. The role of inherited thrombophilic risk factors in neonatal VTE development is poorly defined. The presence of inherited and acquired thrombophilia in mother and newborn is also responsible for the development of thrombosis in neonates and should be considered. Thrombophilia in the mother can lead to increased coagulation potential and prethrombotic conditions during pregnancy, causing thrombotic vasculopathy at the placental level. The benefit of identifying thrombophilia in the sick preterm newborns who are in the group of risk for development of thrombotic complications may facilitate the thromboprophylaxis. Further research regarding assessment of risk factors, diagnostics and treatment strategy is required.

Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.

Publication typeJournal Article
Indexed MeSH termsAnticoagulantsFemaleHumansInfantInfant, NewbornInfant, PrematurePlacentaPregnancyRisk FactorsThrombophiliaThrombosisTissue Plasminogen Activator

Summary

Neonatal thromboembolism in pediatric patients is a rare but life-threatening condition mainly caused by combinations of at least 2 prothrombotic triggering risk factors such as the central venous lines, septic condition, and prematurity. Other risk factors include asphyxia, dehydration, liver dysfunction, inflammation, and maternal condition.

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This narrative review surveys why newborns, especially preterm infants born at 22-27 weeks, face elevated thrombosis risk, attributing it to an immature hemostatic system (reduced vitamin K-dependent procoagulants, low antithrombin, protein C and S, and reduced plasminogen) combined with triggers such as central venous lines, sepsis, prematurity, and maternal thrombophilia. For ASH, it usefully maps the coagulation/thrombosis biology that frames the medicinal-leech secretome's anticoagulant and antithrombotic mechanisms (e.g., antithrombin and platelet-inhibitory activity), and it underscores how delicately hemostatic balance is calibrated in vulnerable patients. Caveat: this is a review summarizing the work of others, not original data, and it concerns systemic neonatal thrombophilia rather than hirudotherapy; it makes no claim about leech therapy and the authors themselves note that risk-factor, diagnostic, and treatment strategies still require further research.

Citation

Neonatal thrombosis.

Makatsariya A et al. · The journal of maternal-fetal & neonatal medicine : the official journal of the European Association of Perinatal Medicine, the Federation of Asia and Oceania Perinatal Societies, the International Society of Perinatal Obstetricians, 2020

Added to ASH library: May 28, 2026 · Site last updated: June 18, 2026

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