OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to describe the spectrum of cross-sectional imaging findings of pathologically proven hepatoportal sclerosis and to compare the features of advanced and nonadvanced hepatoportal sclerosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighteen patients with a histopathologic diagnosis of hepatoportal sclerosis who had concurrent MRI or CT images participated in the study. The following imaging features were assessed: presence of liver nodularity and liver lesions, portal vein patency, presence and degree of portal hypertension, liver volume, and caudate-to-right lobe ratio. These features were compared between patients who underwent transplant and those who did not. RESULTS: The 18 patients (11 men and one boy, six women; mean age, 46.5 years) had hepatoportal sclerosis confirmed with liver biopsy (14 patients) or explant (four patients). Fourteen patients underwent contrast-enhanced MRI, and five underwent CT. The imaging findings were as follows: liver surface nodularity, five patients (all four transplant, one nontransplant) (p = 0.0016); evidence of portal hypertension, 17 patients; increased caudate-to-right lobe ratio, 16 patients; high periportal signal intensity on T2-weighted images, six patients; portal vein occlusion with cavernous transformation, five patients. The transplant patients had smaller pretransplant liver volume than did nontransplant patients (p < 0.04). CONCLUSION: Hepatoportal sclerosis is characterized by caudate lobe hypertrophy and right hepatic lobe atrophy, preserved liver volume, and lack of the liver nodularity associated with portal hypertension. In advanced cases, liver nodularity and atrophy produce an imaging appearance indistinguishable from that of cirrhosis.
OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to describe the spectrum of cross-sectional imaging findings of pathologically proven hepatoportal sclerosis and to compare the features of advanced and nonadvanced hepatoportal sclerosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighteen patients with a histopathologic diagnosis of hepatoportal sclerosis who had concurrent MRI or CT images participated in the study. The following imaging features were assessed: presence of liver nodularity and liver lesions, portal vein patency, presence and degree of portal hypertension, liver volume, and caudate-to-right lobe ratio. These features were compared between patients who underwent transplant and those who did not. RESULTS: The 18 patients (11 men and one boy, six women; mean age, 46.5 years) had hepatoportal sclerosis confirmed with liver biopsy (14 patients) or explant (four patients). Fourteen patients underwent contrast-enhanced MRI, and five underwent CT. The imaging findings were as follows: liver surface nodularity, five patients (all four transplant, one nontransplant) (p = 0.0016); evidence of portal hypertension, 17 patients; increased caudate-to-right lobe ratio, 16 patients; high periportal signal intensity on T2-weighted images, six patients; portal vein occlusion with cavernous transformation, five patients. The transplant patients had smaller pretransplant liver volume than did nontransplant patients (p < 0.04). CONCLUSION:Hepatoportal sclerosis is characterized by caudate lobe hypertrophy and right hepatic lobe atrophy, preserved liver volume, and lack of the liver nodularity associated with portal hypertension. In advanced cases, liver nodularity and atrophy produce an imaging appearance indistinguishable from that of cirrhosis.
Authors: Katharina Lampichler; Georg Semmler; Katharina Wöran; Benedikt Simbrunner; Mathias Jachs; Lukas Hartl; David Josef Maria Bauer; Lorenz Balcar; Lukas Burghart; Michael Trauner; Dietmar Tamandl; Ahmed Ba-Ssalamah; Mattias Mandorfer; Thomas Reiberger; Bernhard Scheiner; Martina Scharitzer Journal: Eur Radiol Date: 2022-09-27 Impact factor: 7.034
Authors: Ji Hun Kang; Do Hyung Kim; So Yeon Kim; Hyo Jeong Kang; Jung Bok Lee; Kyoung Won Kim; Seung Soo Lee; Jonggi Choi; Young-Suk Lim Journal: Abdom Radiol (NY) Date: 2020-10-23