Neonatal Thrombocytopenia

Infant Thrombocytopenia is defined as a decrease of platelet count under 150 000/μL (150×109/L). Among healthy mature newborns the incidence of thrombocytopenia is about 1%, it is much more common in newborns with low birth weight. Thrombocytopenia is one of the most common hematologic irregularities among premature newborns, the most common cause in the first 72 hours of life being chronic intrauterine hypoxia.

The production and turnover of thrombocytes in newborns is similar to that in older children and adults. Lifespan of thrombocytes is 7-10 days.

Maternal Causes
The most common cause of thromboctyopenia in the first 72 hours of the prematurely born infants' lives is chronic intrauterine hypocia based on the insufficiency of placenta during diabetes mellitus or maternal hypertension. Another cause may be the usage of medication such as heparin, thiazide diuretics, quinine, etc. Others include the TORCH infections, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) or the HELLP syndrome. Furthermore, it can be influenced by antibodies against thrombocytes: autoimmune thrombocytopenia – antibodies against maternal and fetal platelets, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP), systemic lupus erythomatosus (SLE), the so-called drug-induced thrombocytopenia and isoimmune thrombocytopenia –antibodies against fetal platelets: neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia (NAIT; usually anti-HPA-1a antibodies), so-called isoimmune thrombocytopenia associated with fetal erythroblastosis.

Placental Causes
Placental causes include chorioangioma, vascular thrombi and the abruption of placenta.

Neonatal Causes
Neonatal causes include:

Lowered platelet production or congenital absence of megacaryocytes (TAR syndrome, Fanconi anemia, rubella, congenital leukemia, trisomy 13, 18, 21 or Turner syndrome, congenital amegacaryocytic thrombocytopenia, methylmalonic, propionic and isovaleric acidemia, etc.)

Increased platelet destruction, which is an increased consumption without an association with a pathological state, where the lowest count is usually lowest before the 4th day, it normalizes before the 10th day of life; bacterial and candida sepsis, congenital infection (TORCH) – especially CMV, thrombosis (renal veins, intracardial, vascular), DIC, IUGR, perinatal asphycia, necrotizing enterocolitis, widespread hemangiomes – Kasabach-Merritt syndrome).