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1.
Journal of the Korean Society of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine ; : 253-257, 2014.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-23914

ABSTRACT

Wandering spleen is a rare clinical condition caused by lax splenic suspensory ligaments. The laxity of ligaments causes torsion of splenic vascular pedicle. CT scan of a 7-year-old girl with abdominal pain showed a non-enhancing lobular mass in lower abdomen. Small bowel loops were located at the right-sided abdomen and colonic loops at the left-sided abdomen. MRI scan showed non-enhancing heterogeneous mass with twisted vascular pedicle. To our knowledge, only a few cases have been reported about wandering spleen diagnosed on MRI.


Subject(s)
Child , Female , Humans , Abdomen , Abdominal Pain , Colon , Infarction , Ligaments , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Wandering Spleen
2.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 555-558, 2004.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-16419

ABSTRACT

The usual imaging findings of common splenic infarction are well known, while the findings for splenic infarctions in the accessory spleen or polysplenia are rare; these unusual imaging findings may make the diagnosis difficult. We report here on two patients who have complained of abdominal pain, and they were diagnosed as splenic infarction that developed in either the accessory spleen or as has having polysplenia. We can diagnose splenic infarction that unusually develops in the accessory spleen or polysplenia when we identify a round, hyperechoic, avascular solid mass on US, or when we identify a round, rim-enhancing, hypodense solid mass with adjacent inflammatory changes and a small amount of ascites on CT that is adjacent to the normal spleen or in one of splenules of polysplenia in the clinical settings of acute abdominal pain.


Subject(s)
Child , Humans , Abdominal Pain , Ascites , Diagnosis , Infarction , Spleen , Splenic Infarction
3.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 805-808, 2000.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-145478

ABSTRACT

Torsion of the accessory spleen is a rare entity that can have variable clinical presentations. We report case involving an 11-year-old boy with severe abdominal pain and a mass that was found to be due to infarction of the accessory spleen, which was twisted on its pedicle. CT revealed a low-attenuating mass with peripheral inflammatory changes in the left upper abdomen. The mass was pathologically confirmed as torsion of the ac-cessory spleen with infarction.


Subject(s)
Child , Humans , Male , Abdomen , Abdominal Pain , Infarction , Spleen
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