Abstract

BackgroundActive and passive theories have been advanced to explain splenomegaly and cytopenias in liver disease. Dameshek proposed active downregulation of hematopoiesis. Doan proposed passive trapping of blood components in a spleen enlarged by portal hypertension. Recent findings do not support a passive process.DiscussionCytopenias and splenomegaly in both liver disease and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) poorly correlate with portal hypertension, and likely reflect an active process allocating stem cell resources in response to injury. Organ injury is repaired partly by bone-marrow-derived stem cells. Signaling would thus be needed to allocate resources between repair and routine marrow activities, hematologic and bone production. Granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) may play a central role: mobilizing stem cells, increasing spleen size and downregulating bone production. Serum G-CSF rises with liver injury, and is elevated in chronic liver disease and SLE. Signaling, not sequestration, likely accounts for splenomegaly and osteopenia in liver disease and SLE. The downregulation of a non-repair use of stem cells, bone production, suggests that repair efforts are prioritized. Other non-repair uses might be downregulated, namely hematologic production, as Dameshek proposed.SummaryRecognition that an active process may exist to allocate stem-cell resources would provide new approaches to diagnosis and treatment of cytopenias in liver disease, SLE and potentially other illnesses.

Highlights

  • Active and passive theories have been advanced to explain splenomegaly and cytopenias in liver disease

  • At least in liver disease and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), splenomegaly and cytopenias are poorly correlated with portal hypertension, and there is evidence for downregulation of hematopoiesis, as Dameshek suggested

  • Portal hypertension leading to splenic enlargement and sequestration is not, a clean explanation of the cytopenias associated with liver disease

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Summary

Discussion

Active and passive theories: signaling or sequestration? The theory of hypersplenism is based on the idea of splenic sequestration. A management process diverting bone marrow stem cell resources away from hematologic and bone production, and toward hepatic repair, could account for splenomegaly, cytopenias and loss of bone mass observed in patients with liver disease. The elevated serum G-CSF reported in two studies of patients with liver disease suggests an alternative, that splenic enlargement in liver disease is, as in bone marrow donors, part of the normal response to demand for stem cells [27, 28]. If increased spleen size is a part of a normal response to demand for stem cells, and is not accompanied by cytopenias in normal individuals (bone marrow donors), why do cytopenias occur in patients with liver disease or SLE?.

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