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Wikipedia

Spleen

The spleen is an organ found in almost all vertebrates. Similar in structure to a large lymph node, it acts primarily as a blood filter. The word spleen comes from Ancient Greek σπλήν (splḗn).[1]

Spleen
The human spleen is located in the upper left abdomen, behind the stomach
Details
SystemImmune system (Lymphatic system)
ArterySplenic artery
VeinSplenic vein
NerveSplenic plexus
Identifiers
Latinsplen, lien
MeSHD013154
TA98A13.2.01.001
TA25159
FMA7196
Anatomical terminology
[edit on Wikidata]
A 3D medical animation still of spleen structure & exact location

The spleen plays very important roles in regard to red blood cells (erythrocytes) and the immune system.[2] It removes old red blood cells and holds a reserve of blood, which can be valuable in case of hemorrhagic shock, and also recycles iron. As a part of the mononuclear phagocyte system, it metabolizes hemoglobin removed from senescent red blood cells. The globin portion of hemoglobin is degraded to its constitutive amino acids, and the heme portion is metabolized to bilirubin, which is removed in the liver.[3][4]

The spleen houses antibody-producing lymphocytes in its white pulp and monocytes which remove antibody-coated bacteria and antibody-coated blood cells by way of blood and lymph node circulation. These monocytes, upon moving to injured tissue (such as the heart after myocardial infarction), turn into dendritic cells and macrophages while promoting tissue healing.[5][6][7] The spleen is a center of activity of the mononuclear phagocyte system and is analogous to a large lymph node, as its absence causes a predisposition to certain infections.[8][4]

In humans, the spleen is purple in color and is in the left upper quadrant of the abdomen.[3][9]

Anatomy

The spleen is underneath the left part of the diaphragm, and has a smooth, convex surface that faces the diaphragm. It is underneath the ninth, tenth, and eleventh ribs. The other side of the spleen is divided by a ridge into two regions: an anterior gastric portion, and a posterior renal portion. The gastric surface is directed forward, upward, and toward the middle, is broad and concave, and is in contact with the posterior wall of the stomach. Below this it is in contact with the tail of the pancreas. The renal surface is directed medialward and downward. It is somewhat flattened, considerably narrower than the gastric surface, and is in relation with the upper part of the anterior surface of the left kidney and occasionally with the left adrenal gland.

There are four ligaments attached to the spleen: gastrosplenic ligament, splenorenal ligament, colicosplenic ligament, and phrenocolic ligament.[10]

Measurements

90% confidence interval of spleen length by abdominal ultrasonography by height of the person[11]
Height Spleen length
Women Men
155–159 cm 6.4–12 cm
160–164 cm 7.4–12.2 cm 8.9–11.3 cm
165–169 cm 7.5–11.9 cm 8.5–12.5 cm
170–174 cm 8.3–13.0 cm 8.6–13.1 cm
175–179 cm 8.1–12.3 cm 8.6–13.4 cm
180–184 cm 9.3–13.4 cm
185–189 cm 9.3–13.6 cm
190–194 cm 9.7–14.3 cm
195–199 cm 10.2–14.4 cm

The spleen, in healthy adult humans, is approximately 7 to 14 centimetres (3 to 5+12 in) in length.

An easy way to remember the anatomy of the spleen is the 1×3×5×7×9×10×11 rule. The spleen is 1 by 3 by 5 inches (3 by 8 by 13 cm), weighs approximately 7 oz (200 g), and lies between the 9th and 11th ribs on the left-hand side and along the axis of the 10th rib. The weight varies between 1 oz (28 g) and 8 oz (230 g) (standard reference range),[12] correlating mainly to height, body weight and degree of acute congestion but not to sex or age.[13]

Blood supply

 
Visceral surface of the spleen

Near the middle of the spleen is a long fissure, the hilum, which is the point of attachment for the gastrosplenic ligament and the point of insertion for the splenic artery and splenic vein. There are other openings present for lymphatic vessels and nerves.

Like the thymus, the spleen possesses only efferent lymphatic vessels. The spleen is part of the lymphatic system. Both the short gastric arteries and the splenic artery supply it with blood.[14]

The germinal centers are supplied by arterioles called penicilliary radicles.[15]

Nerve supply

The spleen is innervated by the splenic plexus, which connects a branch of the celiac ganglia to the vagus nerve.

The underlying central nervous processes coordinating the spleen's function seem to be embedded into the Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-axis, and the brainstem, especially the subfornical organ.[16]

Development

The spleen is unique in respect to its development within the gut. While most of the gut organs are endodermally derived, the spleen is derived from mesenchymal tissue.[17] Specifically, the spleen forms within, and from, the dorsal mesentery. However, it still shares the same blood supply—the celiac trunk—as the foregut organs.

Function

Pulp

 
Micrograph of splenic tissue showing the red pulp (red), white pulp (blue) and a thickened inflamed capsule (mostly pink – top of image). H&E stain.
 
The spleen contains two different tissues, white pulp (A) and red pulp (B). The white pulp functions in producing and growing immune and blood cells. The red pulp functions in filtering blood of antigens, microorganisms, and defective or worn-out red blood cells.
Area Function Composition
red pulp Mechanical filtration of red blood cells. In mice: Reserve of monocytes[5]
white pulp Active immune response through humoral and cell-mediated pathways. Composed of nodules, called Malpighian corpuscles. These are composed of:

Other

Other functions of the spleen are less prominent, especially in the healthy adult:

  • Spleen produces all types of blood cells during fetal life
  • Production of opsonins, properdin, and tuftsin.
  • Release of neutrophils following myocardial infarction.[18]
  • Creation of red blood cells. While the bone marrow is the primary site of hematopoiesis in the adult, the spleen has important hematopoietic functions up until the 5th month of gestation. After birth, erythropoietic functions cease, except in some hematologic disorders. As a major lymphoid organ and a central player in the reticuloendothelial system, the spleen retains the ability to produce lymphocytes and, as such, remains a hematopoietic organ.
  • Storage of red blood cells, lymphocytes and other formed elements. The spleen of horses stores roughly 30 percent of the red blood cells and can release them when needed.[19] In humans, up to a cup (240 ml) of red blood cells is held within the spleen and released in cases of hypovolemia[20] and hypoxia.[21] It can store platelets in case of an emergency and also clears old platelets from the circulation. Up to a quarter of lymphocytes are stored in the spleen at any one time.

Clinical significance

 
Thalassemia enlarged spleen taken after splenectomy

Enlarged spleen

Enlargement of the spleen is known as splenomegaly. It may be caused by sickle cell anemia, sarcoidosis, malaria, bacterial endocarditis, leukemia, polycythemia vera, pernicious anemia, Gaucher's disease, leishmaniasis, Hodgkin's disease, Banti's disease, hereditary spherocytosis, cysts, glandular fever (including mononucleosis or 'Mono' caused by the Epstein–Barr virus and infection from cytomegalovirus), and tumours. Primary tumors of the spleen include hemangiomas and hemangiosarcomas. Marked splenomegaly may result in the spleen occupying a large portion of the left side of the abdomen.

The spleen is the largest collection of lymphoid tissue in the body. It is normally palpable in preterm infants, in 30% of normal, full-term neonates, and in 5% to 10% of infants and toddlers. A spleen easily palpable below the costal margin in any child over the age of 3–4 years should be considered abnormal until proven otherwise.

Splenomegaly can result from antigenic stimulation (e.g., infection), obstruction of blood flow (e.g., portal vein obstruction), underlying functional abnormality (e.g., hemolytic anemia), or infiltration (e.g., leukemia or storage disease, such as Gaucher's disease). The most common cause of acute splenomegaly in children is viral infection, which is transient and usually moderate. Basic work-up for acute splenomegaly includes a complete blood count with differential, platelet count, and reticulocyte and atypical lymphocyte counts to exclude hemolytic anemia and leukemia. Assessment of IgM antibodies to viral capsid antigen (a rising titer) is indicated to confirm Epstein–Barr virus or cytomegalovirus. Other infections should be excluded if these tests are negative.

Splenic injury

Trauma, such as a road traffic collision, can cause rupture of the spleen, which is a situation requiring immediate medical attention.

Asplenia

Asplenia refers to a non-functioning spleen, which may be congenital, or caused by traumatic injury, surgical resection (splenectomy) or a disease such as sickle cell anaemia. Hyposplenia refers to a partially functioning spleen. These conditions may cause[6] a modest increase in circulating white blood cells and platelets, a diminished response to some vaccines, and an increased susceptibility to infection. In particular, there is an increased risk of sepsis from polysaccharide encapsulated bacteria. Encapsulated bacteria inhibit binding of complement or prevent complement assembled on the capsule from interacting with macrophage receptors. Phagocytosis needs natural antibodies, which are immunoglobulins that facilitate phagocytosis either directly or by complement deposition on the capsule. They are produced by IgM memory B cells (a subtype of B cells) in the marginal zone of the spleen.[22][23]

A splenectomy (removal of the spleen) results in a greatly diminished frequency of memory B cells.[24] A 28-year follow-up of 740 World War II veterans whose spleens were removed on the battlefield showed a significant increase in the usual death rate from pneumonia (6 rather than the expected 1.3) and an increase in the death rate from ischemic heart disease (41 rather than the expected 30), but not from other conditions.[25]

Accessory spleen

An accessory spleen is a small splenic nodule extra to the spleen usually formed in early embryogenesis. Accessory spleens are found in approximately 10 percent of the population[26] and are typically around 1 centimeter in diameter. Splenosis is a condition where displaced pieces of splenic tissue (often following trauma or splenectomy) autotransplant in the abdominal cavity as accessory spleens.[27]

Polysplenia is a congenital disease manifested by multiple small accessory spleens,[28] rather than a single, full-sized, normal spleen. Polysplenia sometimes occurs alone, but it is often accompanied by other developmental abnormalities such as intestinal malrotation or biliary atresia, or cardiac abnormalities, such as dextrocardia. These accessory spleens are non-functional.

Infarction

Splenic infarction is a condition in which blood flow supply to the spleen is compromised,[29] leading to partial or complete infarction (tissue death due to oxygen shortage) in the organ.[30]

Splenic infarction occurs when the splenic artery or one of its branches are occluded, for example by a blood clot. Although it can occur asymptomatically, the typical symptom is severe pain in the left upper quadrant of the abdomen, sometimes radiating to the left shoulder. Fever and chills develop in some cases.[31] It has to be differentiated from other causes of acute abdomen.

Hyaloserositis

The spleen may be affected by hyaloserositis, in which it is coated with fibrous hyaline.[32][33]

Society and culture

There has been a long and varied history of misconceptions regarding the physiological role of the spleen, and it has often been seen as a reservoir for juices closely linked to digestion.[34] In various cultures, the organ has been linked to melancholia, due to the influence of ancient Greek medicine and the associated doctrine of humourism, in which the spleen was believed to be a reservoir for an elusive fluid known as "black bile" (one of the four humours).[34] The spleen also plays an important role in traditional Chinese medicine, where it is considered to be a key organ that displays the Yin aspect of the Earth element (its Yang counterpart is the stomach). In contrast, the Talmud (tractate Berachoth 61b) refers to the spleen as the organ of laughter while possibly suggesting a link with the humoral view of the organ.

Etymologically, spleen comes from the Ancient Greek σπλήν (splḗn), where it was the idiomatic equivalent of the heart in modern English. Persius, in his satires, associated spleen with immoderate laughter.[35]

In English, William Shakespeare frequently used the word spleen to signify melancholy, but also caprice and merriment.[35] In Julius Caesar, he uses the spleen to describe Cassius's irritable nature:

Must I observe you? must I stand and crouch
Under your testy humour? By the gods
You shall digest the venom of your spleen,
Though it do split you; for, from this day forth,
I'll use you for my mirth, yea, for my laughter,
When you are waspish.[36]

The spleen, as a byword for melancholy, has also been considered an actual disease.[37] In the early 18th century, the physician Richard Blackmore considered it to be one of the two most prevalent diseases in England (along with consumption).[37] In 1701, Anne Finch (later, Countess of Winchilsea) had published a Pindaric ode, The Spleen, drawing on her first-hand experiences of an affliction which, at the time, also had a reputation of being a fashionably upper-class disease of the English.[38] Both Blackmore and George Cheyne treated this malady as the male equivalent of "the vapours", while preferring the more learned terms "hypochondriasis" and "hysteria".[37][39][40] In the late 18th century, the German word Spleen came to denote eccentric and hypochondriac tendencies that were thought to be characteristic of English people.[35]

In French, "splénétique" refers to a state of pensive sadness or melancholy. This usage was popularised by the poems of Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867) and his collection Le Spleen de Paris, but it was also present in earlier 19th-century Romantic literature.

Food

The spleen is one of the many organs that may be included in offal. It is not widely eaten as a principal ingredient, but cow spleen sandwiches are eaten in Sicilian cuisine.[41] Chicken spleen is one of the main ingredients of Jerusalem mixed grill.[42]

Other animals

 
Laparoscopic view of a horse's spleen (the purple and grey mottled organ)

In cartilaginous and ray-finned fish, the spleen consists primarily of red pulp and is normally somewhat elongated, as it lies inside the serosal lining of the intestine. In many amphibians, especially frogs, it has the more rounded form and there is often a greater quantity of white pulp.[43]

In reptiles, birds, and mammals, white pulp is always relatively plentiful, and in birds and mammals the spleen is typically rounded, but it adjusts its shape somewhat to the arrangement of the surrounding organs. In most vertebrates, the spleen continues to produce red blood cells throughout life; only in mammals this function is lost in middle-aged adults. Many mammals have tiny spleen-like structures known as haemal nodes throughout the body that are presumed to have the same function as the spleen.[43] The spleens of aquatic mammals differ in some ways from those of fully land-dwelling mammals; in general they are bluish in colour. In cetaceans and manatees they tend to be quite small, but in deep diving pinnipeds, they can be massive, due to their function of storing red blood cells.

The only vertebrates lacking a spleen are the lampreys and hagfishes (the early-branching Cyclostomata, or jawless fishes). Even in these animals, there is a diffuse layer of haematopoeitic tissue within the gut wall, which has a similar structure to red pulp and is presumed homologous with the spleen of higher vertebrates.[43]

In mice the spleen stores half the body's monocytes so that upon injury, they can migrate to the injured tissue and transform into dendritic cells and macrophages to assist wound healing.[5]

Additional images

See also

References

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  28. ^ "" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
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  32. ^ "Hyaloserositis". Online Medical Dictionary. Accessed on: June 21, 2008.
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  35. ^ a b c Stanley Eric (2002). "Polysemy and synomyny and how these concepts were understood from the eighteenth century onwards in treatises, and applied dictionaries of English". In Coleman J, McDermott A (ed.). Historical dictionaries and historical Dictionary Research: Papers from the international conference on historical lexicography and lexicology, at the University of Leicester, 2002. Germany: Walter de Gruyter. pp. 170–171. ISBN 978-3-11-091260-9.
  36. ^ Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare Act 4:1
  37. ^ a b c Bynum B (2002). "The spleen". Lancet. 359 (9317): 1624. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(02)08479-9. PMID 12048004. S2CID 33529100.
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  39. ^ Cheyne, George: The English Malady; or, A Treatise of Nervous Diseases of All Kinds, as Spleen, Vapours, Lowness of Spirits, Hypochondriacal and Hysterical Distempers with the Author's Own Case at Large, Dublin, 1733. Facsimile ed., ed. Eric T. Carlson, M.D., 1976, Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, ISBN 978-0-8201-1281-7
  40. ^ Blackmore, Richard: Treatise of the spleen and vapors. London, 1725
  41. ^ Rao, Tejal (2010-05-03). "Spleen Sandwiches: An Italian Tradition". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  42. ^ Rogov, Daniel (2007-03-22). "Dining Out / Mixed Jerusalem grill in Tel Aviv". Haaretz. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  43. ^ a b c Romer, Alfred Sherwood; Parsons,, Thomas S. (1977). The Vertebrate Body. Philadelphia: Holt-Saunders International. pp. 410–11. ISBN 978-0-03-910284-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links

  • Anatomy figure: 38:03-01 at Human Anatomy Online, SUNY Downstate Medical Center – "The visceral surface of the spleen."
  • Anatomy image:7881 at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center
  • "spleen" from Encyclopædia Britannica Online
  • "Spleen and Lymphatic System" 2009-03-13 at the Wayback Machine, Kidshealth.org (American Academy of Family Physicians)
  • "Spleen Diseases" from MedlinePlus
  • "Finally, the Spleen Gets Some Respect" – The New York Times
  • Normal range of spleen size for a given age in children

spleen, look, spleen, wiktionary, free, dictionary, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, uses, anatomical, terminology, spleen, organ, found, almost, vertebrates, similar, structure, large, lymph, node, acts, primarily, blood, filter, word, spleen, come. Look up spleen in Wiktionary the free dictionary For other uses see Spleen disambiguation This article uses anatomical terminology The spleen is an organ found in almost all vertebrates Similar in structure to a large lymph node it acts primarily as a blood filter The word spleen comes from Ancient Greek splhn splḗn 1 SpleenThe human spleen is located in the upper left abdomen behind the stomachDetailsSystemImmune system Lymphatic system ArterySplenic arteryVeinSplenic veinNerveSplenic plexusIdentifiersLatinsplen lienMeSHD013154TA98A13 2 01 001TA25159FMA7196Anatomical terminology edit on Wikidata A 3D medical animation still of spleen structure amp exact locationThe spleen plays very important roles in regard to red blood cells erythrocytes and the immune system 2 It removes old red blood cells and holds a reserve of blood which can be valuable in case of hemorrhagic shock and also recycles iron As a part of the mononuclear phagocyte system it metabolizes hemoglobin removed from senescent red blood cells The globin portion of hemoglobin is degraded to its constitutive amino acids and the heme portion is metabolized to bilirubin which is removed in the liver 3 4 The spleen houses antibody producing lymphocytes in its white pulp and monocytes which remove antibody coated bacteria and antibody coated blood cells by way of blood and lymph node circulation These monocytes upon moving to injured tissue such as the heart after myocardial infarction turn into dendritic cells and macrophages while promoting tissue healing 5 6 7 The spleen is a center of activity of the mononuclear phagocyte system and is analogous to a large lymph node as its absence causes a predisposition to certain infections 8 4 In humans the spleen is purple in color and is in the left upper quadrant of the abdomen 3 9 Contents 1 Anatomy 1 1 Measurements 1 2 Blood supply 1 3 Nerve supply 1 4 Development 2 Function 2 1 Pulp 2 2 Other 3 Clinical significance 3 1 Enlarged spleen 3 2 Splenic injury 3 3 Asplenia 3 4 Accessory spleen 3 5 Infarction 3 6 Hyaloserositis 4 Society and culture 4 1 Food 5 Other animals 6 Additional images 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksAnatomy EditThe spleen is underneath the left part of the diaphragm and has a smooth convex surface that faces the diaphragm It is underneath the ninth tenth and eleventh ribs The other side of the spleen is divided by a ridge into two regions an anterior gastric portion and a posterior renal portion The gastric surface is directed forward upward and toward the middle is broad and concave and is in contact with the posterior wall of the stomach Below this it is in contact with the tail of the pancreas The renal surface is directed medialward and downward It is somewhat flattened considerably narrower than the gastric surface and is in relation with the upper part of the anterior surface of the left kidney and occasionally with the left adrenal gland There are four ligaments attached to the spleen gastrosplenic ligament splenorenal ligament colicosplenic ligament and phrenocolic ligament 10 Measurements Edit 90 confidence interval of spleen length by abdominal ultrasonography by height of the person 11 Height Spleen lengthWomen Men155 159 cm 6 4 12 cm160 164 cm 7 4 12 2 cm 8 9 11 3 cm165 169 cm 7 5 11 9 cm 8 5 12 5 cm170 174 cm 8 3 13 0 cm 8 6 13 1 cm175 179 cm 8 1 12 3 cm 8 6 13 4 cm180 184 cm 9 3 13 4 cm185 189 cm 9 3 13 6 cm190 194 cm 9 7 14 3 cm195 199 cm 10 2 14 4 cmThe spleen in healthy adult humans is approximately 7 to 14 centimetres 3 to 5 1 2 in in length An easy way to remember the anatomy of the spleen is the 1 3 5 7 9 10 11 rule The spleen is 1 by 3 by 5 inches 3 by 8 by 13 cm weighs approximately 7 oz 200 g and lies between the 9th and 11th ribs on the left hand side and along the axis of the 10th rib The weight varies between 1 oz 28 g and 8 oz 230 g standard reference range 12 correlating mainly to height body weight and degree of acute congestion but not to sex or age 13 Spleen seen on abdominal ultrasonography Maximum length of spleen on abdominal ultrasonography Back of lumbar region showing surface markings for kidneys ureters and spleen Side of thorax showing surface markings for bones lungs purple pleura blue and spleen green Blood supply Edit Visceral surface of the spleenNear the middle of the spleen is a long fissure the hilum which is the point of attachment for the gastrosplenic ligament and the point of insertion for the splenic artery and splenic vein There are other openings present for lymphatic vessels and nerves Like the thymus the spleen possesses only efferent lymphatic vessels The spleen is part of the lymphatic system Both the short gastric arteries and the splenic artery supply it with blood 14 The germinal centers are supplied by arterioles called penicilliary radicles 15 Nerve supply Edit The spleen is innervated by the splenic plexus which connects a branch of the celiac ganglia to the vagus nerve The underlying central nervous processes coordinating the spleen s function seem to be embedded into the Hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis and the brainstem especially the subfornical organ 16 Development Edit The spleen is unique in respect to its development within the gut While most of the gut organs are endodermally derived the spleen is derived from mesenchymal tissue 17 Specifically the spleen forms within and from the dorsal mesentery However it still shares the same blood supply the celiac trunk as the foregut organs Function EditPulp Edit Micrograph of splenic tissue showing the red pulp red white pulp blue and a thickened inflamed capsule mostly pink top of image H amp E stain The spleen contains two different tissues white pulp A and red pulp B The white pulp functions in producing and growing immune and blood cells The red pulp functions in filtering blood of antigens microorganisms and defective or worn out red blood cells Area Function Compositionred pulp Mechanical filtration of red blood cells In mice Reserve of monocytes 5 sinuses or sinusoids which are filled with blood splenic cords of reticular fibers marginal zone bordering on white pulpwhite pulp Active immune response through humoral and cell mediated pathways Composed of nodules called Malpighian corpuscles These are composed of lymphoid follicles or follicles rich in B lymphocytes periarteriolar lymphoid sheaths PALS rich in T lymphocytesOther Edit Other functions of the spleen are less prominent especially in the healthy adult Spleen produces all types of blood cells during fetal life Production of opsonins properdin and tuftsin Release of neutrophils following myocardial infarction 18 Creation of red blood cells While the bone marrow is the primary site of hematopoiesis in the adult the spleen has important hematopoietic functions up until the 5th month of gestation After birth erythropoietic functions cease except in some hematologic disorders As a major lymphoid organ and a central player in the reticuloendothelial system the spleen retains the ability to produce lymphocytes and as such remains a hematopoietic organ Storage of red blood cells lymphocytes and other formed elements The spleen of horses stores roughly 30 percent of the red blood cells and can release them when needed 19 In humans up to a cup 240 ml of red blood cells is held within the spleen and released in cases of hypovolemia 20 and hypoxia 21 It can store platelets in case of an emergency and also clears old platelets from the circulation Up to a quarter of lymphocytes are stored in the spleen at any one time Clinical significance Edit Thalassemia enlarged spleen taken after splenectomyEnlarged spleen Edit Main article Splenomegaly Enlargement of the spleen is known as splenomegaly It may be caused by sickle cell anemia sarcoidosis malaria bacterial endocarditis leukemia polycythemia vera pernicious anemia Gaucher s disease leishmaniasis Hodgkin s disease Banti s disease hereditary spherocytosis cysts glandular fever including mononucleosis or Mono caused by the Epstein Barr virus and infection from cytomegalovirus and tumours Primary tumors of the spleen include hemangiomas and hemangiosarcomas Marked splenomegaly may result in the spleen occupying a large portion of the left side of the abdomen The spleen is the largest collection of lymphoid tissue in the body It is normally palpable in preterm infants in 30 of normal full term neonates and in 5 to 10 of infants and toddlers A spleen easily palpable below the costal margin in any child over the age of 3 4 years should be considered abnormal until proven otherwise Splenomegaly can result from antigenic stimulation e g infection obstruction of blood flow e g portal vein obstruction underlying functional abnormality e g hemolytic anemia or infiltration e g leukemia or storage disease such as Gaucher s disease The most common cause of acute splenomegaly in children is viral infection which is transient and usually moderate Basic work up for acute splenomegaly includes a complete blood count with differential platelet count and reticulocyte and atypical lymphocyte counts to exclude hemolytic anemia and leukemia Assessment of IgM antibodies to viral capsid antigen a rising titer is indicated to confirm Epstein Barr virus or cytomegalovirus Other infections should be excluded if these tests are negative Splenic injury Edit Main article Splenic injury Trauma such as a road traffic collision can cause rupture of the spleen which is a situation requiring immediate medical attention Asplenia Edit Main article Asplenia Asplenia refers to a non functioning spleen which may be congenital or caused by traumatic injury surgical resection splenectomy or a disease such as sickle cell anaemia Hyposplenia refers to a partially functioning spleen These conditions may cause 6 a modest increase in circulating white blood cells and platelets a diminished response to some vaccines and an increased susceptibility to infection In particular there is an increased risk of sepsis from polysaccharide encapsulated bacteria Encapsulated bacteria inhibit binding of complement or prevent complement assembled on the capsule from interacting with macrophage receptors Phagocytosis needs natural antibodies which are immunoglobulins that facilitate phagocytosis either directly or by complement deposition on the capsule They are produced by IgM memory B cells a subtype of B cells in the marginal zone of the spleen 22 23 A splenectomy removal of the spleen results in a greatly diminished frequency of memory B cells 24 A 28 year follow up of 740 World War II veterans whose spleens were removed on the battlefield showed a significant increase in the usual death rate from pneumonia 6 rather than the expected 1 3 and an increase in the death rate from ischemic heart disease 41 rather than the expected 30 but not from other conditions 25 Accessory spleen Edit An accessory spleen is a small splenic nodule extra to the spleen usually formed in early embryogenesis Accessory spleens are found in approximately 10 percent of the population 26 and are typically around 1 centimeter in diameter Splenosis is a condition where displaced pieces of splenic tissue often following trauma or splenectomy autotransplant in the abdominal cavity as accessory spleens 27 Polysplenia is a congenital disease manifested by multiple small accessory spleens 28 rather than a single full sized normal spleen Polysplenia sometimes occurs alone but it is often accompanied by other developmental abnormalities such as intestinal malrotation or biliary atresia or cardiac abnormalities such as dextrocardia These accessory spleens are non functional Infarction Edit Main article Splenic infarction Splenic infarction is a condition in which blood flow supply to the spleen is compromised 29 leading to partial or complete infarction tissue death due to oxygen shortage in the organ 30 Splenic infarction occurs when the splenic artery or one of its branches are occluded for example by a blood clot Although it can occur asymptomatically the typical symptom is severe pain in the left upper quadrant of the abdomen sometimes radiating to the left shoulder Fever and chills develop in some cases 31 It has to be differentiated from other causes of acute abdomen Hyaloserositis Edit The spleen may be affected by hyaloserositis in which it is coated with fibrous hyaline 32 33 Society and culture EditThere has been a long and varied history of misconceptions regarding the physiological role of the spleen and it has often been seen as a reservoir for juices closely linked to digestion 34 In various cultures the organ has been linked to melancholia due to the influence of ancient Greek medicine and the associated doctrine of humourism in which the spleen was believed to be a reservoir for an elusive fluid known as black bile one of the four humours 34 The spleen also plays an important role in traditional Chinese medicine where it is considered to be a key organ that displays the Yin aspect of the Earth element its Yang counterpart is the stomach In contrast the Talmud tractate Berachoth 61b refers to the spleen as the organ of laughter while possibly suggesting a link with the humoral view of the organ Etymologically spleen comes from the Ancient Greek splhn splḗn where it was the idiomatic equivalent of the heart in modern English Persius in his satires associated spleen with immoderate laughter 35 In English William Shakespeare frequently used the word spleen to signify melancholy but also caprice and merriment 35 In Julius Caesar he uses the spleen to describe Cassius s irritable nature Must I observe you must I stand and crouch Under your testy humour By the gods You shall digest the venom of your spleen Though it do split you for from this day forth I ll use you for my mirth yea for my laughter When you are waspish 36 The spleen as a byword for melancholy has also been considered an actual disease 37 In the early 18th century the physician Richard Blackmore considered it to be one of the two most prevalent diseases in England along with consumption 37 In 1701 Anne Finch later Countess of Winchilsea had published a Pindaric ode The Spleen drawing on her first hand experiences of an affliction which at the time also had a reputation of being a fashionably upper class disease of the English 38 Both Blackmore and George Cheyne treated this malady as the male equivalent of the vapours while preferring the more learned terms hypochondriasis and hysteria 37 39 40 In the late 18th century the German word Spleen came to denote eccentric and hypochondriac tendencies that were thought to be characteristic of English people 35 In French splenetique refers to a state of pensive sadness or melancholy This usage was popularised by the poems of Charles Baudelaire 1821 1867 and his collection Le Spleen de Paris but it was also present in earlier 19th century Romantic literature Food Edit The spleen is one of the many organs that may be included in offal It is not widely eaten as a principal ingredient but cow spleen sandwiches are eaten in Sicilian cuisine 41 Chicken spleen is one of the main ingredients of Jerusalem mixed grill 42 Other animals Edit Laparoscopic view of a horse s spleen the purple and grey mottled organ In cartilaginous and ray finned fish the spleen consists primarily of red pulp and is normally somewhat elongated as it lies inside the serosal lining of the intestine In many amphibians especially frogs it has the more rounded form and there is often a greater quantity of white pulp 43 In reptiles birds and mammals white pulp is always relatively plentiful and in birds and mammals the spleen is typically rounded but it adjusts its shape somewhat to the arrangement of the surrounding organs In most vertebrates the spleen continues to produce red blood cells throughout life only in mammals this function is lost in middle aged adults Many mammals have tiny spleen like structures known as haemal nodes throughout the body that are presumed to have the same function as the spleen 43 The spleens of aquatic mammals differ in some ways from those of fully land dwelling mammals in general they are bluish in colour In cetaceans and manatees they tend to be quite small but in deep diving pinnipeds they can be massive due to their function of storing red blood cells The only vertebrates lacking a spleen are the lampreys and hagfishes the early branching Cyclostomata or jawless fishes Even in these animals there is a diffuse layer of haematopoeitic tissue within the gut wall which has a similar structure to red pulp and is presumed homologous with the spleen of higher vertebrates 43 In mice the spleen stores half the body s monocytes so that upon injury they can migrate to the injured tissue and transform into dendritic cells and macrophages to assist wound healing 5 Additional images Edit Transverse section of the spleen showing the trabecular tissue and the splenic vein and its tributaries Spleen Laparoscopic view of human spleenSee also EditAsplenia with cardiovascular anomalies rare diseasePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Spleen transplantation Transfer of spleen or its fragments from one individual to another Splenic aspiration Surgical removal of fluid from the spleenPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallbackReferences Edit splhn permanent dead link Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus Digital Library Kapila Vaishali Wehrle Chase J Tuma Faiz 2022 Physiology Spleen StatPearls Treasure Island FL StatPearls Publishing PMID 30725992 retrieved 2022 12 04 a b Mebius RE Kraal G 2005 Structure and function of the spleen Nature Reviews Immunology 5 8 606 16 doi 10 1038 nri1669 PMID 16056254 S2CID 3258595 a b Sahin NE Oner Z Oner S Turan MK 10 January 2022 A study on the correlation between spleen volume estimated via cavalieri principle on computed tomography images with basic hemogram and biochemical blood parameters Anatomy amp Cell Biology 55 1 40 47 doi 10 5115 acb 21 177 PMC 8968228 PMID 35000931 a b c Swirski FK Nahrendorf M Etzrodt M Wildgruber M Cortez Retamozo V Panizzi P Figueiredo JL Kohler RH Chudnovskiy A Waterman P Aikawa E Mempel TR Libby P Weissleder R Pittet MJ 2009 Identification of splenic reservoir monocytes and their deployment to inflammatory sites Science 325 5940 612 16 Bibcode 2009Sci 325 612S doi 10 1126 science 1175202 PMC 2803111 PMID 19644120 a b Jia T Pamer EG 2009 Immunology Dispensable but not irrelevant Science 325 5940 549 50 Bibcode 2009Sci 325 549J doi 10 1126 science 1178329 PMC 2917045 PMID 19644100 Finally the Spleen Gets Some Respect By Natalie Angier The New York Times August 3 2009 Brender Erin 2005 11 23 Richard M Glass ed Illustrated by Allison Burke Spleen Patient Page Journal of the American Medical Association 294 20 2660 doi 10 1001 jama 294 20 2660 PMID 16304080 Loscalzo Joseph Fauci Anthony S Braunwald Eugene Dennis L Kasper Hauser Stephen L Longo Dan L 2008 Harrison s principles of internal medicine McGraw Hill Medical ISBN 978 0 07 146633 2 Ostermann P A W Schreiber H W Lierse W September 1987 Der Bandapparat der Milz und seine Bedeutung bei chirurgischen Eingriffen Langenbeck s Archiv fur Chirurgie in German 371 3 207 216 doi 10 1007 BF01259432 ISSN 0023 8236 PMID 3683035 S2CID 35213355 Chow Kai Uwe Luxembourg Beate Seifried Erhard Bonig Halvard 2016 Spleen Size Is Significantly Influenced by Body Height and Sex Establishment of Normal Values for Spleen Size at US with a Cohort of 1200 Healthy Individuals Radiology 279 1 306 13 doi 10 1148 radiol 2015150887 ISSN 0033 8419 PMID 26509293 Molina D Kimberley DiMaio Vincent J M 2012 Normal Organ Weights in Men The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology 33 4 368 372 doi 10 1097 PAF 0b013e31823d29ad ISSN 0195 7910 PMID 22182984 S2CID 32174574 Sprogoe Jakobsen Susan Sprogoe Jakobsen Ulrik 1997 The weight of the normal spleen Forensic Science International 88 3 215 223 doi 10 1016 S0379 0738 97 00103 5 ISSN 0379 0738 PMID 9291593 Blackbourne Lorne H 2008 Surgical recall Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins p 259 ISBN 978 0 7817 7076 7 Penicilliary radicles Medical dictionary thefreedictionary com Retrieved 2011 04 03 Lori Andrea Perrotta Marialuisa Lembo Giuseppe Carnevale Daniela 2017 06 07 The Spleen A Hub Connecting Nervous and Immune Systems in Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases International Journal of Molecular Sciences 18 6 1216 doi 10 3390 ijms18061216 ISSN 1422 0067 PMC 5486039 PMID 28590409 Vellguth Swantje Brita von Gaudecker Hans Konrad Muller Hermelink 1985 The development of the human spleen Cell and Tissue Research 242 3 579 92 doi 10 1007 BF00225424 PMID 4075378 S2CID 19864892 Rapid neutrophil mobilization by VCAM 1 endothelial cell derived extracellular vesicles Cardiovascular Research Oxford Academic Academic oup com Retrieved 2022 02 15 Carey Bjorn May 5 2006 Horse science What makes a Derby winner Spleen acts as a natural blood doper scientist says NBC News Retrieved 2006 05 09 Spleen Information Surgery and Functions Chp edu Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh 2010 11 17 Archived from the original on 2011 09 26 Retrieved 2011 04 03 Lodin Sundstrom Angelica Schagatay Erika June 2010 Spleen contraction during 20 min normobaric hypoxia and 2 min apnea in humans Aviation Space and Environmental Medicine 8 6 545 49 doi 10 3357 ASEM 2682 2010 PMID 20540444 Di Sabatino A Carsetti R Corazza GR Jul 2 2011 Post splenectomy and hyposplenic states Lancet 378 9785 86 97 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 10 61493 6 PMID 21474172 S2CID 30554953 Carsetti R Rosado MM Wardmann H February 2004 Peripheral development of B cells in mouse and man Immunological Reviews 197 179 91 doi 10 1111 j 0105 2896 2004 0109 x PMID 14962195 S2CID 20654498 Kruetzmann S Rosado MM Weber H Germing U Tournilhac O Peter HH Berner R Peters A Boehm T Plebani A Quinti I Carsetti R Apr 7 2003 Human immunoglobulin M memory B cells controlling Streptococcus pneumoniae infections are generated in the spleen The Journal of Experimental Medicine 197 7 939 45 doi 10 1084 jem 20022020 PMC 2193885 PMID 12682112 Dennis Robinette C Fraumeni Josephf 1977 Splenectomy and Subsequent Mortality in Veterans of the 1939 45 War The Lancet 310 8029 127 29 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 77 90132 5 PMID 69206 S2CID 38605411 Moore Keith L 1992 Clinically Oriented Anatomy 3rd ed Baltimore Williams amp Wilkins p 187 ISBN 978 0 683 06133 8 Abu Hilal M Harb A Zeidan B Steadman B Primrose JN Pearce NW January 5 2009 Hepatic splenosis mimicking HCC in a patient with hepatitis C liver cirrhosis and mildly raised alpha feto protein the important role of explorative laparoscopy World Journal of Surgical Oncology 7 1 1 doi 10 1186 1477 7819 7 1 PMC 2630926 PMID 19123935 polysplenia at Dorland s Medical Dictionary Chapman J Bhimji SS 2018 article 29380 Splenic Infarcts Treasure Island FL StatPearls Publishing PMID 28613652 retrieved 2019 02 27 Jaroch MT Broughan TA Hermann RE October 1986 The natural history of splenic infarction Surgery 100 4 743 50 PMID 3764696 Nores M1 Phillips EH Morgenstern L Hiatt JR February 1998 The Clinical Spectrum of Splenic Infarction The American Surgeon 64 2 182 88 PMID 9486895 Hyaloserositis Online Medical Dictionary Accessed on June 21 2008 Sugar coated spleen Drugs com a b Riva MA Ferraina F Paleari A Lenti MV Di Sabatino A 2019 From sadness to stiffness the spleen s progress Internal and Emergency Medicine 14 5 739 743 doi 10 1007 s11739 019 02115 2 PMID 31152307 S2CID 172137672 a b c Stanley Eric 2002 Polysemy and synomyny and how these concepts were understood from the eighteenth century onwards in treatises and applied dictionaries of English In Coleman J McDermott A ed Historical dictionaries and historical Dictionary Research Papers from the international conference on historical lexicography and lexicology at the University of Leicester 2002 Germany Walter de Gruyter pp 170 171 ISBN 978 3 11 091260 9 Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare Act 4 1 a b c Bynum B 2002 The spleen Lancet 359 9317 1624 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 02 08479 9 PMID 12048004 S2CID 33529100 Rogers KM 1989 Finch s Candid Account vs Eighteenth Century Theories of the Spleen Mosaic A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 22 1 17 27 ISSN 0027 1276 JSTOR 24780450 Cheyne George The English Malady or A Treatise of Nervous Diseases of All Kinds as Spleen Vapours Lowness of Spirits Hypochondriacal and Hysterical Distempers with the Author s Own Case at Large Dublin 1733 Facsimile ed ed Eric T Carlson M D 1976 Scholars Facsimiles amp Reprints ISBN 978 0 8201 1281 7 Blackmore Richard Treatise of the spleen and vapors London 1725 Rao Tejal 2010 05 03 Spleen Sandwiches An Italian Tradition The Atlantic Retrieved 2022 01 03 Rogov Daniel 2007 03 22 Dining Out Mixed Jerusalem grill in Tel Aviv Haaretz Retrieved 2022 01 03 a b c Romer Alfred Sherwood Parsons Thomas S 1977 The Vertebrate Body Philadelphia Holt Saunders International pp 410 11 ISBN 978 0 03 910284 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links Edit Look up spleen in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spleen Anatomy figure 38 03 01 at Human Anatomy Online SUNY Downstate Medical Center The visceral surface of the spleen Anatomy image 7881 at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center spleen from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Spleen and Lymphatic System Archived 2009 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Kidshealth org American Academy of Family Physicians Spleen Diseases from MedlinePlus Finally the Spleen Gets Some Respect The New York Times Normal range of spleen size for a given age in children Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spleen amp oldid 1164632217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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