Doctors baffled as woman sweats blood
Doctors have been left perplexed by a 21-year-old Italian woman with no gashes or skin lesions with years of sweating blood from her face and the palms of her hands. The bleeding would often start while she was sleeping or during physical activity and could last anywhere from one to five minutes. Blood: Italian woman sweating blood. MSN photo While the intensity of the bleeding seemed to increase with stress, she couldn’t single out any obvious trigger.
Her condition has been documented by two physicians from the University of Florence in Italy in the latest issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal. The condition, according MSN, began about three years ago before she started seeking medical help. The situation had taken a toll on her mental health, wrote doctors Roberto Maglie and Marzia Caproni.
“Our patient had become socially isolated owing to
embarrassment over the bleeding and she reported symptoms consistent with major
depressive disorder and panic disorder.” They prescribed her anti-anxiety
medications, but the bleeding continued. After a round of tests and
observations ruled out the possibility that she was faking the condition, she
was diagnosed with hematohidrosis, a rarely reported condition in which
patients spontaneously sweat blood through unbroken skin. Doctors treated her
with propranolol, a heart and blood pressure medication, which reduced the
bleeding but failed to eliminate it completely. Jacalyn Duffin, the Canadian
medical historian and haematologist who wrote a commentary that accompanies the
report, said she was initially skeptical. “My first thought was, is this real?
Could it be fake?” The mystery deepened after she
canvassed her senior haematology colleagues and found that not one of them had
ever come across such a case. Duffin then delved into the medical literature,
managing to turn up more than two dozen similar cases reported around the world
in the past 15 years or so. In many of these, researchers had carefully
documented the tests they had carried out to eliminate the possibility of other
bleeding disorders and the evidence they had found to suggest the presence of
blood in the sweat ducts. “I came to the conclusion that it’s plausible and that
it’s possible,” said Duffin.
The majority of these cases involved young women
or children. Many of the reports documented that the bleeding was preceded by
emotional trauma, such as witnessing violence at home or at school. In all of
the patients, the condition was transient, lasting anywhere from a month to
four years.
Vanguard
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