Immunological function in post-traumatic splenosis.

A 28-year-old male medical student underwent splenectomy at 8 years of age due to traumatic rupture of the spleen sustained in a motor vehicle accident. Eighteen years later the patient had major abdominal surgery performed for an unrelated condition and, at the time of surgery, over 100 splenic nodules were found embedded throughout the patient's omentum, small bowel, and mesentery. An extensive study of immunological functions was carried out during the following 2 years. Through the course of this investigation, it was determined that the patient's peripheral blood smear lacked Howell-Jolly bodies and deformed or damaged erythrocytes, indicating that the splenotic tissue had the capacity to remove intranuclear inclusions from circulating red cells and to phagocytose old erythrocytes. The patient's levels of complement, serum immunoglobulins and the numbers of circulating T and B lymphocytes, helper T cells, and cytotoxic/suppressor T cells all were within the normal range. The response to Streptococcus pneumoniae polysaccharides was also normal, with increased levels of specific antibodies to all serotypes included in the vaccine 4 months after immunization. Finally, histological examination of his biopsied splenotic nodules revealed tissue that was indistinguishable from normal spleen.