Conclusions: A large number of children in Bintulu Hospital in Sarawak, Malaysia, were found to have spleenabscesses.
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We reported that percutaneous catheter drainage was effective for splenicabscess.
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An eighty-six-year-old man was admitted to our hospital for bacterial septic shock due to splenicabscess.
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Percutaneous splenicabscess drainage was urgently performed under ultrasonography, and then the general state of the patient rapidly improved.
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The mold Aureobasidium pullulans was isolated on several nutrient media from a splenicabscess in a patient with disseminated lymphoma.
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CT-guided drainage of splenicabscess seems to be a safe and effective alternative to surgery, allowing preservation of the spleen.
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One patient had a splenicabscess and there was strong clinical evidence for an infected splenic infarct in the second patient.
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Conclusion: Splenicabscess is an uncommon entity that can be treated percutaneously.
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Objective: The objective of our study was to determine the current role of percutaneous CT-guided drainage as an alternative to surgical treatment of splenicabscesses.