Splenomegaly
Revision as of 00:54, 10 March 2026 by Ostermayer (talk | contribs) (Created page with "==Background== *The spleen normally weighs 150-200g in adults and is not palpable on exam *A palpable spleen tip below the left costal margin generally indicates '''at least 1.5-2× enlargement''' — by the time a spleen is palpable, it is significantly enlarged *'''Massive splenomegaly''' (spleen extends beyond the umbilicus or >20 cm on imaging) has a narrower differential: chronic myeloproliferative disorders (especially CML), myelofibrosis, hairy cell leukemia, mala...")
Background
- The spleen normally weighs 150-200g in adults and is not palpable on exam
- A palpable spleen tip below the left costal margin generally indicates at least 1.5-2× enlargement — by the time a spleen is palpable, it is significantly enlarged
- Massive splenomegaly (spleen extends beyond the umbilicus or >20 cm on imaging) has a narrower differential: chronic myeloproliferative disorders (especially CML), myelofibrosis, hairy cell leukemia, malaria, kala-azar (visceral leishmaniasis), Gaucher disease
- Hypersplenism = splenomegaly + cytopenias (from splenic sequestration and destruction of blood cells) — may see anemia, thrombocytopenia, and/or leukopenia
Clinical Features
Symptoms
- Often asymptomatic — discovered incidentally
- Left upper quadrant pain or fullness, early satiety (mass effect on stomach)
- Left shoulder pain (Kehr sign — referred diaphragmatic irritation from splenic pathology, classically splenic rupture or infarct)
- Symptoms of the underlying disease (fever, weight loss, night sweats, fatigue, bleeding, bruising)
Physical Exam
- Palpate from the right lower quadrant toward the left costal margin with the patient supine or in right lateral decubitus position
- A palpable spleen moves with respiration, has a medial notch, and cannot be balloted (distinguishes from left kidney)
- Percussion: Castell's sign (dullness to percussion in the lowest left intercostal space in full inspiration) — sensitivity ~60-80% for splenomegaly
- Assess for associated findings: lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, jaundice, petechiae/purpura, stigmata of liver disease
ED Complications of Splenomegaly
- Splenic rupture: Both traumatic and atraumatic (especially EBV/mononucleosis, hematologic malignancy, malaria); presents with LUQ pain, peritoneal signs, and hemodynamic instability — surgical emergency
- Splenic infarction: Sudden LUQ pain, often pleuritic; associated with embolic sources (atrial fibrillation, endocarditis), myeloproliferative disorders, sickle cell disease, and hypercoagulable states
- Splenic abscess: Fever + LUQ pain + splenomegaly; associated with endocarditis, IV drug use, immunosuppression; diagnosed on CT
- Splenic sequestration crisis: Acute painful enlargement with acute anemia in sickle cell disease — more common in children; can be rapidly fatal
Differential Diagnosis
Infectious
- Viral: EBV (mononucleosis — most common infectious cause in young adults), CMV, HIV, viral hepatitis
- Bacterial: Endocarditis, tuberculosis, brucellosis, typhoid, splenic abscess
- Parasitic: Malaria (massive splenomegaly in endemic areas), kala-azar (visceral leishmaniasis), schistosomiasis
- Fungal: Disseminated histoplasmosis, disseminated candidiasis (immunocompromised)
Hematologic Malignancy
- Leukemia: CML (often massive), CLL, ALL, AML, hairy cell leukemia
- Lymphoma: Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin (especially splenic marginal zone lymphoma)
- Myeloproliferative neoplasms: Polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia, primary myelofibrosis (often massive)
- Myelodysplastic syndromes
Congestive (Portal Hypertension)
- Cirrhosis — most common cause of splenomegaly in adults in developed countries
- Portal vein thrombosis
- Splenic vein thrombosis
- Congestive heart failure (severe right-sided)
- Budd-Chiari syndrome
Hemolytic Anemias
- Sickle cell disease (before autosplenectomy in adults; splenic sequestration in children)
- Hereditary spherocytosis
- Thalassemia major
- Autoimmune hemolytic anemia
- G6PD deficiency (during hemolytic crisis)
Autoimmune/Inflammatory
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Adult-onset Still's disease / Systemic JIA
- Rheumatoid arthritis (Felty syndrome = RA + splenomegaly + neutropenia)
- Sarcoidosis
- Macrophage activation syndrome / Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis
Infiltrative/Storage Diseases
- Gaucher disease (most common lysosomal storage disease; can cause massive splenomegaly)
- Niemann-Pick disease
- Amyloidosis
- Glycogen storage diseases
Other
- Splenic cysts (congenital, post-traumatic, hydatid)
- Splenic hemangioma or other benign tumors
- Metastatic disease to spleen (rare)
Massive Splenomegaly (Short Differential)
Spleen palpable >8 cm below costal margin or >20 cm on imaging:
- CML
- Myelofibrosis
- Hairy cell leukemia
- Malaria (chronic/hyperreactive)
- Kala-azar (visceral leishmaniasis)
- Gaucher disease
- Polycythemia vera
- Splenic marginal zone lymphoma
Evaluation
Workup
- CBC with differential and peripheral blood smear — cytopenias suggest hypersplenism; blasts or abnormal cells suggest malignancy; spherocytes or schistocytes suggest hemolysis; atypical lymphocytes suggest EBV/CMV
- Reticulocyte count — elevated in hemolytic anemias
- LFTs, albumin, INR — assess for liver disease/cirrhosis
- LDH, haptoglobin, indirect bilirubin — hemolysis panel
- CRP, ESR — inflammatory/infectious evaluation
- Ferritin — markedly elevated in MAS/HLH, AOSD/sJIA, malignancy
- Peripheral blood smear — do not skip this — may show blasts (leukemia), teardrop cells (myelofibrosis), target cells (thalassemia/liver disease), hairy cells, or parasites (malaria)
- Blood cultures — if febrile
- Monospot or EBV VCA IgM — in young adults with pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy, and splenomegaly
- HIV — screen in all unexplained splenomegaly
- Hepatitis B/C serologies — if liver disease suspected
- Imaging:
- Ultrasound — first-line to confirm and measure spleen size; also assesses liver, portal vein, and hepatic vasculature
- CT abdomen with contrast — if concern for splenic infarction, abscess, mass, or if evaluating for lymphadenopathy/malignancy
- Lactate, coagulation studies — if concern for sepsis, splenic rupture, or DIC
- Type and screen — if concern for splenic rupture or significant anemia
Management
- Treat the underlying cause
- Splenic rupture: Hemodynamic resuscitation, emergent surgical consultation, massive transfusion protocol if indicated (see Splenic injury)
- Splenic infarction: Supportive care, analgesia, anticoagulation if embolic source identified; surgical consultation if concern for abscess formation or rupture
- Splenic abscess: IV antibiotics + interventional radiology or surgical drainage
- Splenic sequestration crisis (sickle cell): Aggressive IV fluids, transfusion (target Hgb rise of 1-2 g/dL — avoid over-transfusion which can cause auto-transfusion from the spleen and hyperviscosity), emergent hematology consultation
- Activity restriction: Counsel patients with newly diagnosed splenomegaly (especially EBV/mononucleosis) to avoid contact sports and heavy lifting until splenomegaly has resolved — risk of splenic rupture
Disposition
- Admit: Splenic rupture, splenic infarction with hemodynamic instability, splenic abscess, splenic sequestration crisis, new diagnosis of hematologic malignancy, unexplained massive splenomegaly with cytopenias, suspected MAS/HLH
- Discharge with urgent follow-up (24-72h): Hemodynamically stable patients with incidentally discovered mild-moderate splenomegaly and non-critical initial labs; ensure follow-up with hematology, hepatology, or primary care with pending workup communicated
- Return precautions: LUQ pain, lightheadedness/syncope, worsening fatigue, fevers, bleeding/bruising; avoid contact sports
See Also
- Splenic injury
- Mononucleosis
- Cirrhosis
- Leukemia
- Lymphoma
- Sickle cell disease
- Macrophage activation syndrome
- Adult-onset Still's disease
- Fever of unknown origin
- Ferritin
