| Literature DB >> 25910248 |
Liang-Yong Li1, Wen-Ming Yang1, Huai-Zhen Chen1, Yun-Hu Wu1, Xiang Fang1, Jing Zhang1, Zhen Wang2, Yong-Sheng Han3, Yu Wang4.
Abstract
Splenomegaly and pancytopenia are common in Wilson's disease (WD) and splenectomy is one of the conventional treatments for splenomegaly and the associated pancytopenia. However, splenectomy remained controversial for hypersplenism in WD as it was reported that splenectomy leaded to serious emotional and neurological deterioration in WD patients with hypersplenism. In the current study, we present our experiences in 70 WD patients with hypersplenism who had undergone splenectomy, outlining the safety and efficacy of splenectomy in WD. The clinical database of 70 WD patients with hypersplenism who had undergone splenectomy in our hospital between 2009 and 2013 were reviewed and followed-up regularly. Before splenectomy, all the patients accepted a short period of anti-copper treatment with intravenous sodium 2, 3-dimercapto-1-propane sulfonate (DMPS). All the patients demonstrated a marked improvement in platelet and leucocyte counts after splenectomy. No severe postoperative complication was observed. In particular, none of the 37 patients with mixed neurologic and hepatic presentations experienced neurological deterioration after splenectomy, and none of the patients with only hepatic presentations newly developed neurological symptoms. During the one year follow-up period, no patient presented hepatic failure or hepatic encephalopathy, no hepatic patient newly developed neurological presentations, and only 3 patients with mixed neurologic and hepatic presentations suffered neurological deterioration and these 3 patients had poor compliance of anti-copper treatment. Quantative analysis of the neurological symptoms in the 37 patients using the Unified Wilson's Disease Rating Scale (UWDRS) showed that the neurological symptoms were not changed in a short-term of one week after splenectomy but significantly improved in a long-term of one year after splenectomy. Additionally, compared to that before splenectomy, the esophageal gastric varices in most patients significantly improved one year after splenectomy. Thus, we may conclude that splenectomy is a safe and effective therapeutic measure for hypersplenism in WD patients who had been preoperatively treated with DMPS for powerful anti-copper therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25910248 PMCID: PMC4409367 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic and clinical features of the WD patients.
| Patients (n) | 70 |
|---|---|
| Average age (years) | 18.1 (9–42) |
| Gender (M/F) | 46/24 |
| Child-Pugh class | |
| Child-Pugh A | 50 |
| Child-Pugh B | 20 |
| Clinical profile | |
| Hepatic | 33 |
| Mixed | 37 |
| Serum ceruloplasmin (g/L) | 0.075 ± 0.034 |
| 24-hr urinary copper excretion (μg/24 h) | 316.36 ± 31.55 |
Serum copper concentrations before and after DMPS therapy and 1 year after splenectomy (mean±SD).
| Time | Serum copper (μmol/L) |
|---|---|
| Before DMPS therapy | 3.51±1.87 |
| After DMPS therapy | 1.75±0.69 |
| 1 year after splenectomy | 2.67±1.01 |
**P < 0.01, compared to that before DMPS therapy
*P < 0.05, compared to that before DMPS therapy
P < 0.05, compared to that after DMPS therapy.
Comparisons of WBC and PLT counts before and after splenectomy (mean±SD).
| Variables | Pre-splenectomy | Post- splenectomy | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 day | 1 day | 1 week | 2 weeks | 3 weeks | 4 weeks | 1 year | |
| WBC (×109/L) | 2.33±0.82 | 17.96±5.49 | 8.73±3.18 | 4.57±1.11 | 5.10±1.13 | 5.58±1.18 | 6.24±1.28 |
| PLT (×109/L) | 47.34±34.13 | 107.78±40.07 | 373.26±122.92 | 463.20±114.01 | 347.37±66.42 | 340.88±71.63 | 235.61±52.20 |
WBC, white blood cell; PLT, platelet.
*p<0.01, compared to that pre-splenectomy
^p<0.01, compared to that 1 day post-splenectomy.
Comparisons of liver function before and after splenectomy (mean±SD).
| Liver function | Pre-splenectomy | Post-splenectomy | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 day | 1 day | 1 week | 1 month | 1 year | |
| ALT (U/L) | 33.23±16.23 | 62.08±47.70 | 30.90±14.61 | 22.64±10.73 | 19.77±9.93 |
| AST (U/L) | 31.48±11.99 | 64.48±34.31 | 30.03±12.29 | 23.14±9.41 | 21.38±8.67 |
| TB (μmol/L) | 19.89±10.73 | 31.75±13.55 | 18.95±9.91 | 15.60±8.05 | 15.07±8.09 |
| DB (μmol/L) | 8.00±5.70 | 14.61±7.47 | 8.01±5.95 | 6.14±3.79 | 5.85±3.67 |
ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; TB, total bilirubin, DB, direct bilirubin.
*p<0.01, compared to that pre-splenectomy
^p<0.01, compared to that 1 day post-splenectomy.
Neurological symptom scoring before and after splenectomy (mean±SD).
| Time | Unified Wilson's Disease Rating Scale |
|---|---|
| 1 day before splenectomy | 19.74±6.33 |
| 1 week after splenectomy | 20.18±6.61 |
| 1 year after splenectomy | 16.41±5.89 |
*P < 0.05, compared to that 1 day before splenectomy
^p<0.01, compared to that 1 week after splenectomy.