Twenty Years of Splenectomy for Hereditary Spherocytosis
- 1 March 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 116 (3) , 306-308
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1981.01380150034008
Abstract
• A retrospective study of all patients who underwent splenectomy during the 20-year period, 1960 to 1979, for hereditary spherocytosis at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, identified 58 patients, of whom 20 (33%) were 15 years of age or older. Accessory splenic tissue was located in ten (17%) of the patients. Although cholelithiasis was present in only 12 (21%) of the total cohort, when analyzed for patients 10 years of age or older the incidence was 41% (11/27). Because of the positive association between advancing age, cholelithiasis, and hereditary spherocytosis, it is recommended that any patient 10 years of age or older undergo an oral cholecystogram as part of the routine preoperative evaluation. (Arch Surg 1981;116:306-308)This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hereditary spherocytosis: a risk factor for thigh pressure myonecrosis in posterior spine surgeryJournal of Pediatric Orthopaedics B, 2019
- Recurrent Hemolytic Anemia Secondary to Accessory SpleensSouthern Medical Journal, 1978
- Ultrasonic and Radiographic CholecystographyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977
- Splenectomy in congenital microspherocytosisBritish Journal of Surgery, 1969
- Increased Incidence of Accessory Spleens in Hematologic DiseaseArchives of Surgery, 1969
- HEREDITARY SPHEROCYTOSIS IN 100 CHILDREN1966
- Mild Hereditary Spherocytosis--A Family StudyBMJ, 1960