Splenectomy Flashcards

1
Q

A 19 year old man has an emergency splenectomy after a motor vehicle accident. What are the important short-term and long-term management issues to consider?

A

Impression
Spleen is a highly vascular organ, and plays an important immunological function, as well as red cell clearance. Splenectomy in the setting of trauma can have a number of short- and long-term implications for the patient that requiring a number of management inputs

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2
Q

Short-term implications

A

Short term
High risk of bleeding initially:

  • FBC q8hrly due to blood loss (looking for evidence of anaemia, usually a lag in FBC results for this)
  • then regular FBC as patients are likely to have a thrombocytosis (peaks day 20 and then +/- resolves
  • chest physio to prevent pneumonia given abdominal splinting from height of the surgical procedure
  • DVT prophylaxis can start 24 hrs post-operative
  • MVA, therefore patient requires a tertiary survey to identify and treat any other injuries that may be present
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3
Q

Long-term implications

A

Long term

  • patient + family education: lifelong change, increased risks of infection, importance of vaccination, prophylactic ABx post-operatively, alert bracelets, importance of keeping a low threshold for medical assessment. increased risk of
  • registration with splenectomy Australia
  • consider wearing a medic-alert bracelet
  • referral to haematologist for post-splenectomy care, may require anti-platelet therapy if they get marked thrombocytosis
  • Vaccination: pneumococcal, H Influenzae, meningococcal, annual flu shots, all age-appropriate vaccinations. vaccinations are usually done 2-4 weeks post-splenectomy, unless suspected poor adherence and should be vaccinated before leaving hospital.
  • Prophylactic ABx: daily PO amoxicillin for 1st year,
  • supply of emergency/crisis ABx for any fevers/flu’s that may arise so can start treatment immediately, requires pre-surgical ABx
  • Travel: always see GP before travelling OS to inform on appropriate infective precautions and required vaccinations
  • Animal education: any animal or insect bites must present for emergency assessment (esp dog or tic bites).
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