| Literature DB >> 31577734 |
Dmitrij Fomin1, Sigitas Chmieliauskas, Vidas Petrauskas, Alina Sumkovskaja, Karolina Ginciene, Sigitas Laima, Eleonora Jurolaic, Jurgita Stasiuniene.
Abstract
Spleen is typically injured in blunt abdominal trauma. Spleen injuries make 42% of all blunt abdominal injuries. The aim of this study was to perform a retrospective assessment of the cases of acute and subacute isolated traumatic spleen ruptures.A retrospective study performed on 50 patients, whose cause of death was isolated spleen rupture and bleeding into the abdominal cavity.An acute spleen rupture was diagnosed in 47 cases, whereas the rest 3 cases demonstrated a subacute rupture. In cases of acute spleen rupture, the mean weight of spleen was 309.6 g, whereas in 3 cases of subacute rupture the mean weight of the organ achieved 710 g. The mean weight of spleen in the control group with no spleen rupture was 144.7 g.Recording of the cases of isolated acute and subacute traumatic spleen ruptures and morphological assessment of them are important in forensic pathology science and in clinical practice as well.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31577734 PMCID: PMC6783166 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000017363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Figure 1The mean weight of spleen.
Figure 2Correlation between length and weight of spleen.
Figure 3The mean weight of spleen in control group.
Figure 4Blunt abdominal trauma, 600 g spleen with subacute bleeding.
Figure 5The microscopic view of spleen with subacute bleeding.