Demographics, physical features, surgical treatment and follow-up of children with the sclerosing angiomatoid nodular transformation of the spleen
Authors Reference | Age (y) | Gender | Physical examination | Surgical technique | Follow-up |
Delgado et al2 | 4 | Male | Recurrent vomiting and anemia | Laparoscopic splenectomy | No recurrence |
Cao et al3 | 7 | Male | Incidental finding | Not available | No recurrence |
Bamboat et al6 | 17 | Male | Intermittent abdominal pain, left upper quadrant pain | Laparoscopy splenectomy | 7 mon no recurrence |
Kuybulu et al10 | 11 | Female | Growth retardation, splenomegaly | Open splenectomy | Not available |
Vyas et al11 | 1 | Male | Abdominal pain : left flank | Open partial splenectomy | 36 mon no recurrence |
Zhang et al12 | 3 | Male | Incidental finding | Open partial splenectomy | 20 mon no recurrence |
Agrawal et al13 | 12 | Female | Upper quadrant discomfort | Open splenectomy | 24–60 mon, no recurrence |
Pelizzo et al14 | 0.2 | Female | Abdominal distension and rectal bleeding | Open splenectomy | Not available |
Our study | |||||
Case 1 | 14 | Female | Asthenia | Laparoscopy splenectomy | 96 mon, no recurrence |
Case 2 | 4 | Male | Recurrent abdominal pains, pallor, cervical adenopathy | Laparoscopy partial splenectomy | 72 mon, no recurrence |