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  2. No spleen? What you need to know to stay healthy

    www.health.harvard.edu/blog/no-spleen-what-you...

    You dont need your spleen to live a normal, healthy life, but the spleen does play an important role in defending the body against infection, so those without it need to take certain precautions to ensure they remain healthy.

  3. Splenectomy - Johns Hopkins Medicine

    www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/treatment-tests...

    In many cases, the spleen can be removed using a minimally invasive approach or laparoscopically. This involves up to four small (0.5 cm) incisions in the abdomen to allow a small camera and tiny surgical instruments to pass into the abdomen.

  4. Splenectomy (Spleen Removal): Complications, Recovery, and More

    www.webmd.com/digestive-disorders/splenectomy

    You may need to have your spleen removed if you have an injury that damages the organ, causing its covering to break open, or rupture. A ruptured spleen can lead to life-threatening internal...

  5. Spleen Removal: Types, Benefits, and Risks - Healthline

    www.healthline.com/health/spleen-removal

    Removing your spleen is a major surgery and leaves you with a compromised immune system. For these reasons, it’s only performed when truly necessary. The benefits of a splenectomy are that it...

  6. Splenectomy (Spleen Removal): Why It's Done, What to Expect

    www.healthgrades.com/right-care/vascular...

    In most cases, life after splenectomy includes performing many of your former everyday activities such as exercising and working. Other organs will take over the majority of the spleen’s former functions. The absence of your spleen also puts you at increased risk of infection.

  7. A splenectomy is surgery to remove the spleen. Know what to expect from a splenectomy, including steps to prevent infection from UW Health.

  8. Surgery to remove the spleen | Macmillan Cancer Support

    www.macmillan.org.uk/cancer-information-and...

    If the spleen is not too large, this operation can be done using laparoscopic surgery (sometimes called keyhole surgery). Instead of making one large cut, the surgeon makes 4 or 5 small cuts (incisions).