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Spleen-preserving surgery after blunt abdominal trauma with splenic hilum involvement
Author(s) -
José Aurelio Navas-Cuéllar,
Jesús Cañete-Gómez,
Francisco López-Bernal,
Carla García-Rivera,
Felipe Pareja-Ciuró,
Javier Padillo-Ruíz
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cirugía y cirujanos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2444-0507
DOI - 10.1016/j.circen.2015.11.013
Subject(s) - medicine , abdominal trauma , splenectomy , spleen , surgery , blunt , abdominal surgery , sepsis
BackgroundSplenic involvement secondary to blunt abdominal trauma is often treated by performing a splenectomy. The severity of the post-splenectomy syndrome is currently well known (blood loss, sepsis), so there is an increasing tendency to preserve the spleen. The case is presented of splenic preservation after blunt abdominal trauma with hilum involvement, emphasising the role of Floseal® as a haemostatic agent, as well as the use of resorbable meshes to preserve the spleen.Clinical caseA 22-year-old woman presenting with a grade IV splenic lesion secondary to a blunt abdominal trauma after a traffic accident. Partial splenic resection was performed and bleeding was controlled with Floseal® and use of a reinforcing polyglycolic acid mesh. No postoperative complications occurred, being discharged on day 5. The long-term follow-up has been uneventful.ConclusionThe use of haemostatic agents such as thrombin and the gelatine gel (FloSeal®) and the use of polyglycolic acid meshes enable spleen-preserving surgery, making it a feasible and reproducible procedure and an alternative to classical splenectomy

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