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Accessory Spleen Located in the Right Parietal Peritoneum: The First Case Report

Overview
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2017 Sep 21
PMID 28930831
Citations 2
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Abstract

Rationale: Accessory spleen is a congenital abnormality caused by failure of the splenic anlage to fuse during embryology. The presence of an accessory spleen located in the parietal peritoneum has not been reported so far, and an accessory spleen situated on the right side is extremely rare. In the present study, we describe the first case of an accessory spleen located in the right parietal peritoneum.

Patients Concerns: A 65-year-old man, presented with pain in his left abdomen for 1 month.

Diagnoses: With ultrasonography and computed tomography, it was difficult to determine the accurate location and diagnosis, and an abdominal fibroma was preoperatively considered.

Interventions: By laparotomy, we found a mass connected to the right parietal peritoneum by a vascular pedicle. We resected it completely, and the gross specimen measured 5.0 × 3.0 × 2.5 cm and was a localized tumor with a capsule.

Outcomes: Microscopically, sinusoids were visible, as well as scattered lymphoid follicles, eosinophils, histiocytes, plasma cells, neutrophils, and red blood cells, indicative of splenic tissue. Finally, the lesion was diagnosed as an accessory spleen located in the right parietal peritoneum. Postoperatively, he recovered well and was followed up for a 31 months, during which he was well with no complication.

Lessons: We present the first accessory spleen located in the right parietal peritoneum. Awareness of the accessory spleen and familiarity with typical imaging findings are necessary for surgeons to make a precise preoperative diagnosis.

Citing Articles

An extremely rare case of an oversized accessory spleen: case report and review of the literature.

Palumbo V, Mannino M, Teodoro M, Menconi G, Schembari E, Corsale G BMC Surg. 2019; 19(1):45.

PMID: 31029135 PMC: 6487026. DOI: 10.1186/s12893-019-0510-z.


Infarcted accessory spleen masquerading as a mesenteric cyst.

Sheth H, Chaudhari S, Sinha Y, Prajapati R BMJ Case Rep. 2018; 2018.

PMID: 30115724 PMC: 6101306. DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2018-226130.

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