Klin Padiatr
DOI: 10.1055/a-2703-2504
Pictorial Essay

Conservative Treatment of Spontaneous Neonatal Aortic Thrombosis: A Case Study Expanding the Evidence Base

Konservative Behandlung einer spontanen, neonatalen Aortenthrombose: Ein Fallbericht zur Erweiterung der Evidenzbasis

Authors

  • Felix Mögel

    1   Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch, Feldkirch, Austria
  • Fabian Schmid

    2   Department of Internal Medicine I and Cardiology, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch, Feldkirch, Austria
  • Andreas Kirchner

    2   Department of Internal Medicine I and Cardiology, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch, Feldkirch, Austria
  • Wolfgang Hofmann

    3   Department of Vascular Surgery, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch, Feldkirch, Austria
  • Manfred Cejna

    4   Institute for Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch, Feldkirch, Austria
  • Burkhard Simma

    1   Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch, Feldkirch, Austria
  • Karin Konzett

    1   Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Academic Teaching Hospital Feldkirch, Feldkirch, Austria

Introduction

Neonatal aortic thrombosis (NAT) is very rare and occurs with an incidence of 1 per 100 000 cases (Nagel K et al., Klin. Padiatr. 2010, 222: 134–139.). Clinical presentation ranges from asymptomatic patients to loss of limbs and organ dysfunction. Neonatal thrombosis is associated with several risk factors including prematurity, genetics (hereditary deficiency of protein C or protein S, antithrombin III), hypoxia, dehydration and sepsis (Makatsariya A et al., J. Matern. Fetal Neonatal Med. 2022, 35: 1169–1177). Depending on the duration of placement, umbilical catheters are considered the most common cause of NATs, accounting for up to 80% of cases (Boo N et al., J. Paediatr. Child Health 1999, 35: 460–465). The gold standard of diagnosis is abdominal ultrasound or contrast angiography. Variable treatment modalities exist including thrombolysis, anticoagulation and thrombectomy depending on the level of severity. Mortality is reported to be high and ranges from nearly 15% up to 39% (Mulcaire-Jones JP, et al., Cardiol Young 2020, 30 (1): 95–99).



Publication History

Article published online:
11 November 2025

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