Rose M, Dinour D, Chisin R
Department of Medicine, Hadassah University Hospital, Mount Scopus, Jerusalem, Israel.
Clin Cardiol. 1992 Sep;15(9):697-8. doi: 10.1002/clc.4960150914.
Patients with extensive atherosclerosis are at increased risk of developing embolic complications during cardiac catheterization. We describe a 51-year-old man with unstable angina and bilateral leg claudication who developed fever and right upper abdominal pain shortly after cardiac catheterization. Liver-spleen scintigraphy demonstrated a wedge-shaped filling defect compatible with splenic infarction, and serial scans performed over a period of five months showed resolution of this finding. Splenic infarction tends to be under-diagnosed, and physicians should be aware of this potentially serious complication of cardiac catheterization.