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Medical News

JAMA. 1979;241(5):437-449. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290310003001.
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ABSTRACT

Autotransplantation of spleen tissue after trauma: encouraging evidence  Some aspects of medical therapy may change as a result of the recent recognition that autotransplantation of fragments of splenic tissue to other body sites following traumatic rupture of the spleen or splenectomy is not so rare.The first recent study to show this was reported in The New England Journal of Medicine last year (298:1389-1392, 1978) by Howard A. Pearson, MD, and co-workers in the departments of pediatrics and surgery at Yale University School of Medicine. Using interference phase microscopic examination of circulating RBCs, the investigators assessed splenic activity in 22 children who had undergone a splenectomy following trauma.In 13 of the 22 children, there was a low percentage of "pitted" RBCs, suggesting a return of splenic function. In five of the children, a technetium Tc 99m sulfur colloid scan demonstrated multiple nodules of splenic tissue.The second study

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