Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2015.
World J Respirol. Jul 28, 2015; 5(2): 69-77
Published online Jul 28, 2015. doi: 10.5320/wjr.v5.i2.69
Table 1 Medical complications after splenectomy
Early
Lower lobe collapse of left lung
Left pleural effusion
Pneumonia
Venous thromboembolism
Subphrenic abscess
Delayed
Overwhelming infections: bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Hemophilus influenzae, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus group B, Salmonella species, Escherichia coli and other coliforms, Capnocytophaga canimorsus and rarely Pseudomonas aeruginosa), parasitic (Babesiosis Plasmodium species, Ehrlichiosis)
Venous thromboembolism
Pulmonary hypertension
Graft vs host disease[61]
Table 2 World Health Organization's classification of pulmonary hypertension[10]
Group I - PAH
Idiopathic PAH
Heritable PAH (BMPR2, ALK1, ENG, SMAD9, CAV1, KCNK3, Unknown)
Drug and toxin induced
Associated with (1) Connective tissue disease; (2) HIV infection; (3) Portal hypertension; (4) Congenital heart disease; and (5) Schistosomiasis
Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and/or pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis
Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn
Group II - Pulmonary hypertension due to left heart disease
Left ventricular systolic dysfunction
Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction
Valvular disease
Congenital/acquired left heart inflow/outflow tract obstruction and congenital cardiomyopathies
Group III - Pulmonary hypertension due to lung diseases and/or hypoxia
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Interstitial lung disease
Other pulmonary diseases with mixed restrictive and obstructive pattern
Sleep-disordered breathing
Alveolar hypoventilation disorders
Chronic exposure to high altitudes
Developmental lung disease
Group IV - Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension
Group V - Pulmonary hypertension with unclear multifactorial mechanisms
Hematologic disorders: chronic hemolytic anemia, myeloproliferative disorders, splenectomy
Systemic disorders: sarcoidosis, pulmonary histiocytosis, lymphangioleimyomatosis
Metabolic disorders: glycogen storage disease, Gaucher’s disease, hypothyroidism
Others: tumoral obstruction, fibrosing mediastinitis, chronic renal failure, segmental pulmonary hypertension
Table 3 List of splenectomy and pulmonary hypertension studies
Ref.Patient cohort (n)Study designNo. of patients with splenectomyMethod of PH diagnosisComment
Hoeper et al[8]Unexplained PHTN (61)Retrospective7RHC3 patients had splenectomy for hereditary spherocytosis and trauma, one patient with ITP
Jaïs et al[11]CTEPH (257)Retrospective22 (8.6%)RHC15 patients had splenectomy after trauma, 4 with hemolytic disorder
Jaïs et al[11]Idiopathic PHTN (276)Retrospective7 (2.5%)RHCLower prevalence of splenectomy in idiopathic PHTN compared to prior study
Phrommintikul et al[38]PHTN in Thalassemia with Hb < 10 g/dL (29)Retrospective29 (75.8%)TTEIncreased prevalence of PHTN with higher nucleated red cells, platelets and transfusion requirement in splenectomised patients than those with intact spleen
Elstein et al[16]Gaucher’s disease (134), 9 patients had PHRetrospective6TTEAll patients with PHTN had enzyme replacement therapy
Stewart et al[15]Hereditary stomatocytosis after splenectomy (9)Retrospective92 RHC3 patients developed CTEPH, one portal hypertension
1 on autopsy
Palkar et al[63]PHTN after splenectomy (9)Retrospective9RHC4 patients belonged to group 1, two to group 4 and one each in groups 2, 3 and 5