“…[ 9 ]. Disorder | Clinical manifestation |
Achenbach’s syndrome [ 10 ] | Paroxysmal bruising of the fingers |
Amyloidosis [ 11 ] | Cerebral, cutaneous, intracranial and gastrointestinal bleeding |
Angina bullosa hemorrhagica | Acute painful blisters in the mount |
Autoerythrocyte syndrome (also known as psychogenic purpura and Gardner–Diamond syndrome) [ 12 , 13 ] | Recurrent, spontaneous, painful ecchymosis, frequently preceded by a prodrome of pain or itching of the skin |
Exercise induced purpura [ 14 ] | Purpuric patches on the lower limbs after exercise |
Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia [ 15 ] | Recurrent epistaxis, gastrointestinal bleedings, hemorrhage from visceral arteriovenous malformation (eg, cerebral and pulmonary), telangiectasia on skin and mucosal surfaces |
Hypothyroidism [ 16 ] | Often mild mucocutaneous bleeding tendency and rarely severe (eg, hemorrhages after trauma or surgery) |
Medications | Bruising and bleeding from skin and the gastrointestinal tract |
Noonan syndrome [ 17 ] | Postsurgical bleeding without any coagulation or platelet function abnormality |
Osteogenesis imperfecta [ 18 ] | Variety of bleeding symptoms including bruising, bleeding after interventions and epistaxis |
Scurvy [ 19 ] | Malaise, lethargy, purpura, intracerebral hemorrhage, subperiosteal hemorrhage, perifollicular hemorrhage, corkscrew hairs, poor wound healing and scorbutic gums |
Senile purpura [ 20 ] | Scattered purpuric patches and white pseudoscars with skin atrophy |
Skin fragility and connective tissue disorders (eg, Ehlers–Danlos syndrome) [ 21 ] | Excessive bruising but systemic manifestations of the specific condition |
Uremia [ 22 ] | Bruising and hemorrhage |
Vasculitis (eg, Henoch–Schönlein purpura) [ 23 ] | Purpuric rash and pulmonary hemorrhage |
…”