
@article{ref1,
title="Fatality caused by self-bloodletting in a patient with factitious anemia",
journal="International journal of hematology",
year="2003",
author="Hirayama, Yasuo and Sakamaki, Sumio and Tsuji, Yasushi and Sagawa, Tamotsu and Takayanagi, Norihiro and Chiba, Hiroki and Matsunaga, Takuya and Kato, Junji and Niitsu, Yoshiro",
volume="78",
number="2",
pages="146-148",
abstract="Death by bloodletting among patients with factitious anemia has never been reported to our knowledge. We report the first known case. A 25-year-old woman with severe iron deficiency anemia confessed her habit of bloodletting at her first visit to our hospital, in March 1998. We prescribed oral iron and referred her to a psychiatrist. The diagnosis was borderline personality disorder. The psychiatrist began counseling the patient and prescribed a major tranquilizer. The patient's method of bloodletting was to insert an 18-gauge needle without syringe into her vein after inducing congestion in her arm. This method was considered to involve risk of death, because once the patient fell into a faint caused by blood loss, the bloodletting could not be stopped. Although we attempted to persuade the patient to stop bloodletting by this method, she died after self-bloodletting in September 1999. It is not known whether the death was intentional suicide or an accident.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0925-5710",
doi="10.1007/BF02983383",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02983383"
}