Let’s talk about the organ nobody talks about. Most people don’t even know where their spleen is. Until something goes wrong. But your spleen is one of the most important immune organs in your body.
Where Is the Spleen?
Your spleen sits under your left rib cage, next to your stomach, above your left kidney. It’s about the size of a clenched fist. It’s Soft, spongy and has a deep purple colour. It stays protected quietly under your ribs.
What Does the Spleen Actually Do?
Many people think the spleen filters lymph. It doesn’t. The spleen filters blood — not lymph. But it works closely with the lymphatic and immune systems. It is like a quality control centre for your blood.
Its major roles for blood filtration are:
• Removes old or damaged red blood cells
• Recycles iron
• Filters out bacteria from the bloodstream
Inside your spleen are two important areas:
• White pulp – immune activity
• Red pulp – blood filtration
White pulp contains lymphocytes that detect and respond to infections. If bacteria enter your bloodstream your spleen is one of the first responders.
The spleen stores:
• Lymphocytes
• Monocytes
• Platelets
In times of infection or trauma, it can release immune cells into circulation. It is a reserve army. In some animals this function is stronger, but in humans the spleen can still act as a small blood reservoir during certain stress conditions.
How Is the Spleen Connected to Lymph?
The spleen is technically a lymphoid organ — but it filters blood and it does not filter lymph fluid directly. However, it supports immune cell production and activation — which affects lymphatic function. If the immune system is overactive or chronically inflamed, the spleen can become enlarged (splenomegaly).
What Happens When the Spleen Is Stressed?
Signs of spleen strain may include:
• Fullness under the left ribs
• Left shoulder discomfort (referred pain)
• Frequent infections
• Fatigue
• Easy bruising
The Liver–Spleen Relationship
The spleen drains into the portal circulation of the liver. If the liver congestion increases, portal pressure rises and chronic inflammation persists, the spleen can become affected. This is why liver health and spleen health are often linked. Everything in the body is connected. Nothing works alone.
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The effects of chronic stress on the spleen:
• Suppresses immune regulation
• Increases inflammation
• Alters white blood cell behaviour
While the spleen itself doesn’t “hold emotions,” prolonged stress absolutely affects immune organ function.

The spleen plays a protective immune role — especially against certain bacteria and it supports:
• Gentle lymph flow
• Liver function
• Anti-inflammatory nutrition
• Proper sleep
• Nervous system regulation
Your spleen is not loud. It doesn’t demand attention. It works quietly in the background — filtering, protecting, monitoring, responding. It is part of your immune intelligence. And like the lymphatic system…It thrives on rhythm, balance, and safety.


