Abstract

Splenic infarction is a thromboembolic disease that is frequently missed in acute settings. Previous reviews were rarely presented from a clinical perspective. We aimed to evaluate the clinical characteristics, risk factors with diagnostic value, and prognostic factors using large cohort data and a matched case–control study method. A retrospective medical record review of six hospitals in Taiwan from January 1, 2005, to August 31, 2020, was conducted. All patients who underwent contrast CT with confirmed the diagnosis of splenic infarction were included. Their characteristics were presented and compared to a matched control group with similar presenting characteristics. Prognostic factors were also analyzed. A total of 130 cases were included, two-thirds of whom presented with abdominal pain. Atrial fibrillation was the most common associated predisposing condition, followed by hematologic disease. A higher proportion of tachycardia, positive qSOFA score, history of hypertension or atrial fibrillation, leukocytosis, and thrombocytopenia were found in splenic infarction patients compared to their counterparts. An underlying etiology of infective endocarditis was associated with a higher proportion of ICU admission. Splenic infarction patients often presented with left upper abdominal pain and tachycardia. A history of hypertension, atrial fibrillation, a laboratory result of leukocytosis or thrombocytopenia may provide a clue for clinicians to include splenic infarction in the differential list. Among the patients diagnosed with splenic infarction, those with an underlying etiology of infectious endocarditis may be prone to deterioration or ICU admission.

Highlights

  • Splenic infarction is a thromboembolic disease that is frequently missed in acute settings

  • It was because that no specific coding in ICD-9 for splenic infarction and the coding: other diseases of spleen (289.59) included the splenic disorders other than splenic infarction

  • Of all patients presenting to the emergency department with left upper quadrant pain, we provide plausible clues for differentiating splenic infarction from other diseases in the clinical environment

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Summary

Introduction

Splenic infarction is a thromboembolic disease that is frequently missed in acute settings. All patients who underwent contrast CT with confirmed the diagnosis of splenic infarction were included. Their characteristics were presented and compared to a matched control group with similar presenting characteristics. Splenic infarction patients often presented with left upper abdominal pain and tachycardia. Splenic infarction is a frequently missed diagnosis in acute clinical settings. It is often under-diagnosed because it has a wide range of non-specific clinical presentations and underlies fresh-diagnosed ­illness[1]. Due to escalating accessibility of computed tomographic(CT) s­ cans[10,11,12,13], splenic infarction is frequently an incidental finding and considered insignificant by emergency physicians. This study aimed to evaluate the clinical characteristics, risk factors with diagnostic value, and prognostic factors using a large retrospective cohort data and a matched case–control study method

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