[Acute non-specific splenitis as indicator of systemic infection. Assessment of 71 autopsy cases].

Autor: Arismendi-Morillo GJ; Departamento de Patología, Hospital General del Sur Dr. Pedro Iturbe, Maracaibo, Venezuela. gjam3000@hotmail.com, Briceño-García AE, Romero-Amaro ZR, Fernández-Abreu MC, Girón-Piña HE
Jazyk: Spanish; Castilian
Zdroj: Investigacion clinica [Invest Clin] 2004 Jun; Vol. 45 (2), pp. 131-5.
Abstrakt: Classic pathology textbooks claim that acute splenitis reflects septic states, nevertheless, the evidence upon which that association is based remains unclear. We assessed the occurrence of acute splenitis, as an indicator of systemic infection, in 34 autopsies performed in patients in whom the cause of death was due to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, secondary to sepsis (group A); and in 37 cases of death by non-infectious causes (group B). These necropsies were done during the period January 31, 1999-December 31, 2000, at the Pathology Department of the Hospital General del Sur "Dr. Pedro Iturbe", Maracaibo, Venezuela. Acute splenitis was observed in 79% of the cases in group A, whereas it was absent in group B (p < 0.001). Thirty three (97%) of the patients of group A did not receive antibiotic therapy, and died within the first 24 hours following admission. Our results suggest that based on a proper clinical-pathological correlation, non-specific acute splenitis constitutes a finding that reflects a septic state, at least in cases that do not receive anti-microbial therapy.
Databáze: MEDLINE