Ferrante A, Kiroff G K, Goh D H, Drew P A
Med Hypotheses. 1985 Feb;16(2):133-46. doi: 10.1016/0306-9877(85)90067-2.
Splenectomized patients, who have had their spleens removed following trauma, have immune deficiencies. However, the risk of infection (with one exception--septicaemia caused mainly by Streptococcus pneumoniae) and malignancy in these patients appears to be comparable to that of healthy individuals. We propose that a compensatory increase in the activity of effector cells, such as natural killer cells (NK) and macrophages, may protect against infection and malignant diseases in splenectomized individuals.