We report the challenging case of an 81-year-old woman on dual antiplatelet therapy with recurrent strokes, who presented with severe obscure gastrointestinal bleeding. A thorough diagnostic work-up, including capsule endoscopy, double balloon enteroscopy, arteriography, exploratory laparotomy and mouth-to-anus intraoperative enteroscopy, failed to reveal the source of the bleeding. During a 2-year period, the patient required 117 packed red blood cell units, despite withdrawal of antiplatelet drugs and empirical therapy with high-dose somatostatin analogues. The patient was administered an increasing dosage of thalidomide, up to 300 mg/day, with thromboembolism prophylaxis for 3 months, with no clinical response. The bleeding stopped for 3 months after heparin was discontinued, but thalidomide had to be withdrawn owing to adverse effects. Since bleeding recurred a month later, the patient underwent another 3-month course of thalidomide. The patient has not required further blood transfusion after a 1-year follow-up.
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