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| Congestion |
| Etiology Any abnormality leading to elevated splenic vein pressures Cirrhosis of the liver with portal hypertension, heart failure with systemic venous hypertension, portal or splenic vein thrombosis Sepsis may result in acute congestion of spleen |
| Pathogenesis Elevated venous pressure results in higher sinusoidal pressures Fibroses over time with increased pressure, |
| Epidemiology Common finding in patients with congestive heart failure (up to 500 g) or cirrhotic liver disease |
| General Gross Description Enlarged reddish purple spleen Longer the spleen is congested the more firm it becomes |
| General Microscopic Description Red pulp sinusoids filled with blood Over time fibrosis of the sinusoid walls secondary to increased pressures with dilatation Hemosiderin deposition following RBC destruction in dilated sinusoids Nodules of hemosiderin-laden macrophages with calcium deposition and fibrosis are Gandy-Gamma nodules |
| Clinical Correlation Enlarged spleen is vulnerable to trauma Persistent enlargement may lead to RBC destruction |
| References Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th edition. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 670. |
| Congestion |
| Synopsis by: Melinda Sanders M.D. (T07000M36100)[413] |
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