Contributors: Michael W. Winter MD, Paritosh Prasad MD
Synopsis
A splenic abscess is a walled-off infection within the spleen. Splenic abscesses are rare, although their identification has increased with more readily available cross-sectional imaging. Trauma, immunosuppression, and infection are the primary risk factors for developing a splenic abscess. Infection can occur spontaneously, often in the setting of immunosuppression, seeding from
endocarditis, or as a result of ischemic injury with secondary abscess formation.
Patients most typically present with fevers, emesis, and left upper quadrant abdominal pain. They may have splenomegaly. Causal organism varies by risk factor:
- Streptococcus and Staphylococcus: seen in patients with endocarditis
- Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae: seen in patients with intraabdominal infections
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium avium complex, Salmonella typhi, and Pneumocystis jiroveci: seen in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease and AIDS
- Mycobacterium spp., fungi (Candida albicans), protozoa: seen in immunocompromised patients
Splenic abscesses can form fistulae within the gastrointestinal tract, pleural space, or lung parenchyma or they may perforate, leading to peritonitis.
Codes
ICD10CM:
D73.3 – Abscess of spleen
SNOMEDCT:
82053000 – Splenic abscess
Differential Diagnosis & Pitfalls
To perform a comparison, select diagnoses from the classic differential
Last Reviewed:02/06/2018
Last Updated:02/06/2018