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Review
. 2000 Sep;65(1):56-61.
doi: 10.1002/1096-8652(200009)65:1<56::aid-ajh10>3.0.co;2-1.

Splenosis presenting as occult gastrointestinal bleeding

Affiliations
Free article
Review

Splenosis presenting as occult gastrointestinal bleeding

W M Sikov et al. Am J Hematol. 2000 Sep.
Free article

Abstract

A 48-year-old man presented with recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding and anemia. Routine endoscopic evaluation was nondiagnostic. Angiography demonstrated multiple apparent arteriovenous malformations. Exploratory laparotomy revealed numerous splenic implants along the small and large bowels, some of which had apparently eroded through the bowel mucosa and bled. Excision of these penetrating lesions prevented further bleeding. An incidentally noted renal cell cancer was also resected. The patient's splenosis was the result of childhood trauma that caused splenic rupture and precipitated splenectomy. Splenosis develops frequently following traumatic splenic rupture. Experimental evidence suggests that the presence of an intact spleen suppresses the growth and development of splenic implants. Following splenectomy, splenules may replace some of the "housekeeping" and immunologic functions of the spleen, but even patients with documented splenosis should be considered functionally hyposplenic. While in most cases splenules cause no symptoms, splenosis must be considered in the differential diagnosis of previously splenectomized patients who present with unexplained masses or occult bleeding.

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