Nakamae H, Hino M, Ohta K, Suzuki K, Aoyama Y, Sakai N, Sakamoto C, Hasegawa T, Yamane T, Tatsumi N
Osaka City University, Department of Clinical Hematology.
Rinsho Ketsueki. 1998 Mar;39(3):216-20.
A 22-year-old unmarried female student of nurse school was admitted to our hospital because of hypochromic anemia and fever of unknown origin. She was diagnosed as having iron-deficiency anemia and was treated with iron, but progressive anemia recurred periodically. In particular, rapidly progressive anemia was observed after the patient stayed overnight, so we strongly suspected factitious anemia. A search of her locker in the sickroom and her room at home revealed many syringes, injection needles and a bottle of blood. Factitious anemia was diagnosed and she confessed to self blood-drawing. After a psychiatric consultation, anemia tended to to resolve gradually. However she did not go to the hospital after 6 months from her discharge. Physicians should consider factitious anemia in a patient with severe chronic hypochromic anemia who dose not respond to adequate iron therapy, particularly in a patient with medical training.