Spleen Helping Heart Recover from Disease Lithia Springs GA

In mice, scientists found, the spleen serves as a home for a type of white blood cell that scavenges dead tissue and helps produce inflammation, which contributes to healing. In particular, the researchers discovered that the spleen helps the heart recover from disease.

Family Chiropractic Office
(678) 456-3785
4399 Austell Rd
Austell, GA
Carren Family Chiropractic
(678) 609-4795
1680 Mulkey Rd, Ste G
Austell, GA
Kostas Chiropractic Clinics
(770) 434-2273
2810 Cobb Lane
Smyrna, GA
Burke Chiropractic - Ask for Dr. Burke
(770) 432-9290
545 Concord Rd SE
Smyrna, GA
Warner Family Chiropractic
(770) 438-2273
3201 Austell Rd Sw
Marietta, GA
Berman Chiropractic & Rehab
(678) 567-0566
2495 E West Connector
Austell, GA
Allied Ankle & Foot Care Centers
(678) 306-1342
4045-A Lindley Circle
Powder Springs, GA
Pro Adjuster Chiropractic Clinic
(678) 922-7698
1385 Highlands Ridge Rd
Smyrna, GA
Kostas Chiropractic Clinics
(770) 439-6556
3968 Jimmy Lee Smith Pkwy
Hiram, GA
Chastain Animal Clinic
(770) 435-7067
2787 South Cobb Drive
Smyrna, GA
Data Provided by:
 
Provided By:

Spleen Helping Heart Recover from Disease

Though its reputation doesn't rank down there with the appendix, the spleen isn't exactly known as a vital organ. In fact, plenty of people do fine without it.

But new research suggests the spleen plays a bigger role in the immune system than previously thought.

In mice, scientists found, the spleen serves as a home for a type of white blood cell that scavenges dead tissue and helps produce inflammation, which contributes to healing. In particular, the researchers discovered that the spleen helps the heart recover from disease.

"While the spleen may not be essential for your survival, it plays a crucial role once you are sick," said study author Filip K. Swirski, an immunology instructor at Harvard Medical School.

The findings could lead to a better understanding of the immune system, including its response to cancer, Swirski said. And it definitely improves the profile of a little-understood organ.

It's much more obscure than, say, the liver or kidneys, but the spleen still takes up a lot of space. In humans, it's about the size of a large eggplant and shaped like a kidney, Swirski said.

Scientists have known that the spleen recycles red blood cells and scans the blood for germs. "It serves as a filtering system," Swirski said. "It captures viruses or bacteria, and can elicit an inflammatory response."

Inflammation -- think of the redness around a wound -- indicates that the immune system is rushing in to defend the body.

But people often do just fine without their spleens. Traumatic injuries, such as those sustained in traffic accidents, often result in surgery to remove the spleen. And surgeons remove spleens from people with some medical conditions, including non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

In their study, the researchers examined mice to see if having a spleen helped the mice recover from induced heart disease. A 1977 study of veterans who'd had their spleens removed suggested they had twice the risk of dying of heart disease, Swirski said.

They found that the spleen did indeed appear to help the heart, through white-blood cells known as monocytes. The spleen served as a home for many of the cells, Swirski said.

A report on the study appears in the July 31 issue of Science.

"This just adds another function to the spleen," Swirski said. "It's not only a place where blood cells come to die and where the immune system screens for infection. It's relevant to how the immune system is mobilized."

Future research could explore how to boost the spleen's role in the immune system's response or keep it from being hijacked by germs, he added.

In a commentary accompanying the study, two doctors from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City suggest the spleen is still as "dispensable," despite the new findings. But, they wrote, the spleen does seem "a bit more purposeful and deserving of recognition."

More information

The Journal of the American Medical Association has more about the spleen.

SOURCE: Filip K. Swirski, Ph.D., instructor, immunology, Harvard Medical School, Boston; July 31, 2009, Science

Author: By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

Read Article at HealthDay.com

Related Local Events
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)
Dates: 6/20/2012 - 6/20/2012
Location: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Tom Harkin Global Communications Center
Atlanta, GA
View Details

Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)
Dates: 10/24/2012 - 10/24/2012
Location: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Tom Harkin Global Communications Center
Atlanta, GA
View Details