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Asplenia

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Asplenia refers to the absence ('a-') of normal spleenfunction and is associated with some risks. Asplenia may be congenital (congenital asplenia), or acquired through surgery (splenectomy) or through processes that destroy the spleen, generally through its function to filter the blood and therefore referred to as autosplenectomy(eg spherocytosisand sickle-cell disease).

Asplenia increases the risk of septicaemiafrom encapsulated bacteria, and can result in a syndrome known as overwhelming post splenectomy infection(OPSI) which can kill within a few hours. In particular patients are at risk from Pneumococcus, but also Haemophilus influenzae & Meningococcus. To minimised these risks, antibiotic & vaccination protocols have been established [{{fullurl:Template:FULLPAGENAME}}#endnote_BMJ1996] [{{fullurl:Template:FULLPAGENAME}}#endnote_BMJ2001], but are often poorly adhered to by doctors and patients [{{fullurl:Template:FULLPAGENAME}}#endnote_JCP2000].

The risk to asplenic patients has been expressed as equivalent for a child to die in home accident, and for adults dying in a road traffic accident (reference UK Splenectomy Trust Advice) - so sensible precautions are needed, but no panic.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  • 1 Antibiotic prophylaxis
  • 2 Vaccinations
  • 3 Hyposplenism
  • 4 External links
  • 5 References

Antibiotic prophylaxis

Because of the increased risk of infection, physicians administer oral antibiotics as a prophylaxisafter a surgical splenectomy. The duration suggested varies: one suggestion is that antibiotics be taken for two years or until the age of sixteen years old is reached, whichever is longer.

Patients are also cautioned to take antibiotics at the first onset of an upperor lower respiratory tract infection(for example, sore throat or cough), or at the onset of any fever.

Antibiotic prophylaxis is also needed before certain surgical and dental procedures.

Vaccinations

It is suggested that splenectomized persons receive the following vaccinations:

  • pneumococcusevery 6 years (a conjugated form is used for children under 2 years)
  • Haemophilus influenzae
  • meningococcus-'C' conjugate vaccine ('A' needed for travel vaccination to some countries)
  • annual fluvaccinations (to help prevent getting secondary bacterial infection).

Hyposplenism

Hyposplenism is the condition where the spleen is poorly-functioning but not as severely affected as with asplenism.

External links

  • Medik.Info Word-document factsheet

References

  1. ^  Guidelines for the prevention and treatment of infection in patients with an absent or dysfunctional spleen - British Committee for Standards in Haematology (BMJ 1996;312:430-434)
  2. ^  British Committee for Standards in Haematology Guideline up-date (BMJ 1996;312:430-434 response 2001)
  3. ^  Overwhelming infection in asplenic patients: current best practice preventive measures are not being followed - Sept 2000 (J Clin Pathol 2001;54:214-218)nl:Asplenie
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/Asplenia"



This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asplenia Wikipedia article Asplenia.

 
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