“…A study by Renzulli et al, 16 demonstrated five major categories of pathology that result in or contribute to atraumatic splenic rupture (neoplastic, infectious, inflammatory, drug‐treatment related, and mechanical) while 6.4% of atraumatic splenic ruptures in this study, had nodiscernable etiologic factor at all (idiopathic or normal spleen). While the accepted algorithm for treatment of splenic rupture caused by traumatic injuries has been published and generally agreed upon, treatment of splenic rupture of an atraumatic nature is either extrapolated from the data on traumatic injury or directed on a case by case basis 1-7,10-12 . Case studies on atraumatic splenic injury successfully treated with SAE are growing in number, with recent cases including etiologies such as malaria vivax infection, 17,18 Babesia Microti infection, 19 T‐cell lymphocytic leukemia, 20 chronic myeloid leukemia, 21 autoimmune lymphoproliferative disease, 22 venous malformation with consumptive coagulopathy, 23 and colonoscopy 24 …”