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Pulmonary embolism and splenic infarction in a patient with sickle cell trait.

Abstract
A 43 year-old black man with sickle cell trait documented by hemoglobin electrophoresis presented with severe pleuritic chest pain and hypoxemia three weeks after discharge following abdominal surgery. A pulmonary embolus was diagnosed by angiography and he was treated with heparin; the minimum arterial pO2 was 55 torr while O2 was being administered at a rate of 3 L/min. During this therapy, he developed abdominal pain. Computerized tomography suggested splenic infarction, which was documented by radionuclide liver-spleen scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); the patient's spleen had been normal at exploratory laparotomy three weeks previously. No source for emboli was identified in the deep venous system by MRI. Although splenic infarction has been reported in patients with sickle cell trait at high altitude, this is the first reported case of splenic infarction secondary to the hypoxemia of pulmonary embolism in a patient with sickle cell trait. The spleen is subject to infarction in sickle cell trait because blood flow is slow through a hypoxemic and acidemic environment. The additional hypoxemia due to pulmonary embolism is presumed, in our patient, to have created a local splenic environment which permitted infarction to occur.
AuthorsJ Sugarman, W M Samuelson, R H Wilkinson Jr, W F Rosse
JournalAmerican journal of hematology (Am J Hematol) Vol. 33 Issue 4 Pg. 279-81 (Apr 1990) ISSN: 0361-8609 [Print] United States
PMID2316514 (Publication Type: Case Reports, Journal Article)
Topics
  • Adult
  • Anemia, Sickle Cell (complications)
  • Humans
  • Liver (diagnostic imaging)
  • Male
  • Pulmonary Embolism (complications)
  • Radionuclide Imaging
  • Sickle Cell Trait (complications)
  • Spleen (diagnostic imaging)
  • Splenic Infarction (etiology)

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