We are reporting the case of an ambulatory young woman with a 10-year history of recurrent venous thrombosis who presented to us with diffuse intravascular coagulation (DIC). After excluding the recognized causes of DIC, we examined the possibility that her clinically quiescent ulcerative colitis might be the underlying stimulus. We documented sepsis-range endotoxemia in this patient at a time when she was afebrile and had a normal C-reactive protein level. In vitro her serum upregulated tissue factor in cultured endothelial cells. We postulate that she had become tolerant to the systemic effects of endotoxin leaking from her inflamed colon but that the endotoxin stimulated her endothelium and/or monocytes to produce tissue factor that made her intensely hypercoagulable. Her prothrombotic state may have been compounded by the fact that she was heterozygous for prothrombin G20210A and that her plasma clotting time demonstrated resistance to activated protein C.