Myocardial infarction and other arterial occlusions are considered to be rare in hemophilia A. However, a systematic study of the subject has never been attempted. All case reports of myocardial infarction or other arterial occlusions have been now gathered and properly evaluated from a cardiological point of view. Thirty-six patients with myocardial infarction and 6 patients with documented cerebrovascular event were retrieved from the literature. The age of the patients varied between 7 and 79 years, with a mean of 44 years. In 16 cases, the arterial occlusion occurred in men <40 years of age. The majority of myocardial infarctions (MIs) were anterolateral (12 cases). Posterior-inferior MI was present in 6 cases whereas it was of the non-Q type in 4 patients. It was multiple in 6 cases, and in the remaining patients the type of infarction could not be determined. In 26 cases, the thrombotic event (22 myocardial infarctions and 4 ischemic cerebrovascular accidents) occurred during or after the infusion of factor VIII concentrates and, more frequently, after prothrombin complex concentrates (activated or non-activated ones) or recombinant factor VIIa preparations. In 3 cases, the vascular complication occurred after intravenous desmopressin administration. MI was fatal in 7 instances. After the event, signs and symptoms of heart failure were seen as sequels in 7 patients. One patient had to undergo cardiac transplant 5 months after the MI. No death occurred after ischemic cerebrovascular accidents. Since not all hemophilia patients develop inhibitors and therefore are not usually treated with activated concentrates, this series of patients is somewhat biased and does not allow general conclusions. The high prevalence of MI and other arterial complications which occurred after transfusion therapy, usually in patients with inhibitors, clearly indicates the need for a careful evaluation of the appropriate therapeutic approach in each single patient.