Spleen: Anatomy & Imaging - Spleen Scene Setter
- Location & Size: LUQ, intraperitoneal. Avg. 12x7x4 cm. Wt: ~150g.
- 📌 Mnemonic "1,3,5,7,9,11": 1x3x5 inches, 7 oz, deep to ribs 9-11.
- Vasculature: Splenic artery (from celiac trunk); Splenic vein (joins SMV → portal vein).
- Imaging:
- USG: Homogeneous, echogenic cf. liver.
- CECT: Gold standard. Homogeneous enhancement. NECT: 40-60 HU.
- MRI: T1 hypointense, T2 hyperintense.

⭐ Accessory spleen (splenunculus): Most common congenital anomaly, often at hilum; found in up to 30% of cases at autopsy/CT.
Splenomegaly & Diffuse Disease - The Swollen Spleen
- Definition: Spleen length > 12-13 cm or weight > 200g.
- Common Causes:
- Congestive: Portal hypertension (cirrhosis), heart failure.
- Infective: Malaria, Kala-azar, EBV, TB.
- Hematological: Leukemias, lymphomas, hemolytic anemias, myeloproliferative disorders.
- Storage: Gaucher's, Niemann-Pick.
- Inflammatory: Sarcoidosis, SLE.
- Imaging:
- USG: Measures size, assesses echotexture. Doppler for portal flow.
- CT/MRI: Confirms size, evaluates density/signal, aids in identifying cause.

⭐ In portal hypertension, USG may show dilated portal vein (>13mm), splenic vein (>10mm), collaterals, and ascites.
Focal Splenic Lesions - Spleen Spotting
- Common Benign: Simple cyst, Hemangioma, Hamartoma.
- Common Malignant: Lymphoma, Metastases (melanoma, lung, breast, ovary).
- Infectious/Inflammatory: Abscess, Granulomas (TB, sarcoidosis).
| Lesion | CECT Appearance | Key Differentiator(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Simple Cyst | Water density (<20 HU), non-enhancing | Sharply marginated, anechoic on USG |
| Hemangioma | Peripheral nodular enhancement, centripetal fill | Often hyperechoic on USG |
| Lymphoma | Hypodense, homogeneous, poor enhancement | Often multiple, splenomegaly |
| Metastases | Variable, often hypovascular | History of primary malignancy |
| Abscess | Rim-enhancing, central low attenuation, +/- gas | Clinical signs of infection (fever) |
⭐ Splenic lymphoma is the most common malignant tumor of the spleen, often presenting as diffuse infiltration or multiple nodules rather than a single discrete mass.
Splenic Trauma - Spleen Under Siege
- Most common: blunt trauma. CT is gold standard. Non-operative management (NOM) for stable patients.
- AAST Splenic Injury Grading:
| Grade | Description |
|-------|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| I | Subcapsular hematoma <10%; Capsular tear <1cm |
| II | Hematoma 10-50% or intraparenchymal <5cm; Laceration 1-3cm |
| III | Hematoma >50% or ruptured; Intraparenchymal >5cm; Laceration >3cm |
| IV | Laceration involving segmental/hilar vessels (>25% devascularization) |
| V | Shattered spleen; Hilar vascular injury devascularizing spleen |

⭐ Kehr's sign: referred left shoulder pain, may indicate splenic rupture due to diaphragmatic irritation.
Lymph Nodes & Lymphoma - Node Network News
- Normal Nodes: Oval, fatty hilum. Short axis: Abdomen/Pelvis <10mm; Mesentery <5mm.
- Benign vs. Malignant Node Features:
Feature Benign Malignant Shape Oval, reniform Round Hilum Fatty, preserved Lost, effaced Calcification Granulomatous (TB) Treated lymphoma, some mets Necrosis TB, suppurative Common, esp. high-grade - Lymphoma:
- Bulky, homogeneous adenopathy; splenomegaly common.
- NHL: Commoner, often extranodal. HL: Contiguous spread.

- Ann Arbor Staging (Simplified):
Stage Involvement I Single LN region or single extralymphatic (IE) II ≥2 LN regions, same side diaphragm III Both sides diaphragm; +/- Spleen (S) IV Diffuse extralymphatic disease - B-symptoms: Fever, night sweats, wt loss >10%. E: Extranodal.
⭐ "Floating aorta sign" or "Sandwich sign": Mesenteric/retroperitoneal nodes encasing vessels, characteristic of lymphoma.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Splenomegaly (>12 cm length): common, due to portal hypertension, hematological disorders.
- Splenic trauma: most common in blunt injury; note Kehr's sign, use AAST grading.
- Splenic infarcts: wedge-shaped peripheral defects; causes include embolic, hematologic.
- Accessory spleen (splenunculus): common congenital variant, usually near splenic hilum.
- Lymphadenopathy (>1 cm short axis): suggests malignancy/infection; PET-CT for lymphoma staging.
- Splenic calcifications: often from old granulomatous disease (TB) or healed infarcts.
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