RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Clinical features of Jacobsen syndrome include facial dysmorphism, congenital heart defects, digit anomalies and mild to moderate psychomotor retardation. Thrombocytopenia or pancytopenia is observed in one half of patients. PATIENTS: Two unrelated children, a 6-month- and a 12-year-old, presented with a moderate thrombocytopenia associated with the clinical features of Jacobsen syndrome. Bone marrow aspirates showed, in both patients, normal cellularity with an increased number of micromegacaryocytes. Chromosome analysis showed a partial deletion of the long arm of chromosome 11. The 12-year-old patient had a history of upper respiratory airways infections with immune humoral deficiency (decreased level of IgA and IgM) which, to our knowledge, has never been reported. CONCLUSION: Jacobsen syndrome is a cause of inherited thrombocytopenia in children. Humoral immune functions must be explored in patients with a history of repeated infections.