Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-17-2024
Publication Title
Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine
Abstract
Introduction: Phlegmasia cerulea dolens (PCD) is an uncommon, potentially life-threatening complication of acute deep venous thromboses that requires a timely diagnosis. The name of the condition, the visual diagnostic criteria, and the preponderance of cases in the literature referencing findings exclusively in patients with lighter skin complexions means that PCD may not be on the differential diagnosis for the patient with more melanated skin who is experiencing this time-sensitive vascular emergency. Case Report: We describe one case of PCD in a patient with darker skin complexion and the importance of identifying clinical findings, regardless of skin color, given the paucity of reference images for PCD in darker complected patients. Our literature review yielded 60 case reports for PCD. Only two papers included images referencing patients of color. Conclusion: Accurate diagnosis requires recognition of diagnostic findings, which may vary significantly between phenotypically distinct populations. Many pathognomonic physical exam findings rely on descriptors based on presentation in phenotypically white patients.
First Page
163
Last Page
167
PubMed ID
38869343
Volume
8
Issue
2
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Bornstein, Kasha; Larosa, Elizabeth; Byrd, Kelsey; Laney, Dan; Ferral, Hector; and Murphy-Lavoie, Heather, "When Educational Images Don’t Reflect the Population: Phlegmasia Cerulea Dolens, a Case Report" (2024). School of Medicine Faculty Publications. 2716.
https://digitalscholar.lsuhsc.edu/som_facpubs/2716
10.5811/cpcem.1905
Included in
Emergency Medicine Commons, Hematology Commons, Internal Medicine Commons, Radiology Commons