Mij
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
@GloriaDG
This sounds similar for the subgroup of patients who were in the hereditary hypercoagulation state group presented for ME years ago, that they needed a different treatment approach because the 'trigger' that caused thickening of blood resulted in some form of injury to the vascular system.
It also pings for me as it is an example of a concept I keep encountering: that there are patients who have a congenital, anatomical abnormality that prior to an infection, is completely or largely asymptomatic, and that only becomes apparent after a major inflammatory event. That was the case for me with tethered cord syndrome and, apparently, in this patient with IJVS.
This sounds similar for the subgroup of patients who were in the hereditary hypercoagulation state group presented for ME years ago, that they needed a different treatment approach because the 'trigger' that caused thickening of blood resulted in some form of injury to the vascular system.