2018
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.3177
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Torsion of Wandering Spleen with Infarction

Abstract: Wandering spleen is a rare entity that results from the absence or maldevelopment of the ligaments that support the spleen in its normal location. As a result, the spleen is hypermobile and may be predisposed to hilar torsion and subsequent infarction, making it a potentially fatal abdominal emergency. We present a case of a 36-year-old Afghan female who presented with an acute abdomen, and was radiologically and surgically confirmed to have a wandering spleen with torsion and complete infarction. Knowledge of… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…[ 20 ] Most adult patients with WS are asymptomatic and are incidentally diagnosed during physical examination, with a firm mobile abdominal mass with characteristic palpable “notched borders,” or via imaging examination for other purposes. [ 9 , 21 ] Whereas pediatric patients usually present with acute abdominal pain, when complicated by splenic torsion, the pain severity often depends on the torsion degree. In pediatric patients, mild torsion may present as chronic abdominal pain due to splenic congestion; moderate torsion usually presents with intermittent pain, which is caused by torsion and detorsion of the vascular pedicle; severe torsion always leads to splenic infarction and results in acute abdomen.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…[ 20 ] Most adult patients with WS are asymptomatic and are incidentally diagnosed during physical examination, with a firm mobile abdominal mass with characteristic palpable “notched borders,” or via imaging examination for other purposes. [ 9 , 21 ] Whereas pediatric patients usually present with acute abdominal pain, when complicated by splenic torsion, the pain severity often depends on the torsion degree. In pediatric patients, mild torsion may present as chronic abdominal pain due to splenic congestion; moderate torsion usually presents with intermittent pain, which is caused by torsion and detorsion of the vascular pedicle; severe torsion always leads to splenic infarction and results in acute abdomen.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In abdominal ultrasonography, during a condition of WS, the spleen is not visualized in the splenic fossa, and a mass appears in the abdomen or pelvic cavity, which demonstrates a heterogeneous or hypoechoic echotexture with decreased hilar color flow on Doppler. [ 21 ] Beside the diagnosis of WS, the viability of the spleen, involvement of other nearby organs, and torsion degree, which can be defined by identification of the whirl sign and the hilar color Doppler flow, are able to be assessed via ultrasonography. [ 6 ] Abdominal CT scan is another common examination that is routinely performed to aid the diagnosis and assessment of WS.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According the anatomopathological point of view, the wandering spleen could be located in the different quadrants of the abdomen: hypogastric [6,10], epigastric [11], periumbilical [5], left iliac fossa [12], right flank [3]. In our case, the spleen is located in the left flank.…”
Section: Case Presentationmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…The torsion of vascular pedicle of spleen could observed on CT-scan [9]. According to Khan's study, CTscan is the best method of choice for diagnosis when splenic torsion is suspected [10].…”
Section: Case Presentationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous reports have described splenic torsion in conjunction with a wandering spleen [79] or an accessory spleen [10, 11]. However, few reports have described splenic torsion in the context of polysplenia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%