HISTORY AND REASON FOR ADMISSION: A 53-year-old man, who had undergone a splenectomy for a traumatic splenic tear 20 years previously, was admitted because an acute myocardial infarction was suspected. 20 years ago, a splenectomy had been performed because of traumatic rupture. INVESTIGATIONS: Laboratory values were normal except for a microcytic anaemia, thrombocytopenia (109,000/microliter) and a raised ferritin level (547 ng/ml). Coronary heart disease as well as other cardiac and upper gastrointestinal abnormalities were excluded. Computed tomography revealed a space-occupying mass in the left lower lobe of the lung near the heart. This filled with contrast medium on coelangiography at the same time as the liver and a subphrenic mass thought to be an accessory spleen. TREATMENT AND COURSE: At thoracotomy numerous splenic masses, maximally 7 cm in diameter, were removed from near the heart, the costal pleura and the lung margin. There were haematological changes similar to those after splenectomy: leucocytosis (32,400/microliter) and thrombocytosis (637,000/microliter) on the 11th postoperative day and Howell-Jolly bodies noted on the 16th day. CONCLUSION: In splenosis the disseminated pieces of splenic tissue can partly substitute for the normal spleen's functions. Splenosis tissue should, therefore, not be removed in every case, especially, if it does not cause symptoms.
HISTORY AND REASON FOR ADMISSION: A 53-year-old man, who had undergone a splenectomy for a traumatic splenic tear 20 years previously, was admitted because an acute myocardial infarction was suspected. 20 years ago, a splenectomy had been performed because of traumatic rupture. INVESTIGATIONS: Laboratory values were normal except for a microcytic anaemia, thrombocytopenia (109,000/microliter) and a raised ferritin level (547 ng/ml). Coronary heart disease as well as other cardiac and upper gastrointestinal abnormalities were excluded. Computed tomography revealed a space-occupying mass in the left lower lobe of the lung near the heart. This filled with contrast medium on coelangiography at the same time as the liver and a subphrenic mass thought to be an accessory spleen. TREATMENT AND COURSE: At thoracotomy numerous splenic masses, maximally 7 cm in diameter, were removed from near the heart, the costal pleura and the lung margin. There were haematological changes similar to those after splenectomy: leucocytosis (32,400/microliter) and thrombocytosis (637,000/microliter) on the 11th postoperative day and Howell-Jolly bodies noted on the 16th day. CONCLUSION: In splenosis the disseminated pieces of splenic tissue can partly substitute for the normal spleen's functions. Splenosis tissue should, therefore, not be removed in every case, especially, if it does not cause symptoms.