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  • Title: Uncommon Presentation of Hypersplenism in Adult Sickle Cell Disease Patients: A Rare Case Report.
    Author: Qureshi A, Kasbawala K, Santos MT, Cuoccio C, Bahl S, Butt AA, Xiao P, Genato R, Milone L.
    Journal: Am J Case Rep; 2024 Sep 20; 25():e944693. PubMed ID: 39300742.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND Hypersplenism, the rapid and premature destruction of blood cells, encompasses a triad of splenomegaly, cytopenias (anemia, leukopenia, or thrombocytopenia), and compensatory bone marrow proliferation. Secondary hypersplenism results from non-intrinsic splenic diseases, such as hemoglobinopathies. Sickle cell disease consists of a group of genotypes, where hemoglobin sickle C disease (HbSC) is the inheritance of hemoglobin S with hemoglobin C. Most homozygous genotypes undergo complete auto-splenectomy by age 6 years, whereas those with HbSC disease rarely do. We report a rare case of hypersplenism and massive splenomegaly in an adult with sickle cell disease, the HbSC genotype, requiring splenectomy. CASE REPORT A 41-year-old woman with known splenomegaly initially presented to the general surgery clinic for management of abdominal pain. She was found to have anemia, indicating cytopenia likely from hypersplenism. Consequently, she underwent splenic artery embolization, followed by an exploratory laparotomy and splenectomy, with an unremarkable postoperative course. CONCLUSIONS Acute splenic sequestration crisis can result from hypersplenism, a potentially fatal complication of sickle hemoglobinemia. The continuous cycle of sickled cell entrapment and stasis causes numerous splenic infarctions, forming splenic parenchymal scar tissue which reduces the spleen's size and functionality - the process of auto-splenectomy. Adults rarely experience these crises past adolescence, which are secondary to the scarring and atrophy from premature auto-splenectomy. Our patient's spleen measured 21.1 cm, larger than the average adult's spleen. In our case, adjunctive preoperative splenic artery embolization likely contributed to decreased intraoperative blood loss during splenectomy, mitigating the need for perioperative transfusions.
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