| Literature DB >> 24693305 |
Abstract
We report two cases of focal nodular hyperplasia in patients following gadoxetic acid (Gd-EOB-DTPA)-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging confirmed with histopathology. These cases showed an atypical pattern during the delayed-hepatobiliary phase after the injection of gadoxetic acid. One case showed a total defect, and the other showed a peripheral ring-like enhancement without a visible central scar, mimicking hepatocellular carcinoma. The pathologic examination demonstrated that the two lesions were focal nodular hyperplasia.Entities:
Keywords: DTPA; Focal Nodular Hyperplasia; Liver Neoplasms
Year: 2014 PMID: 24693305 PMCID: PMC3955861 DOI: 10.5812/iranjradiol.9269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Radiol ISSN: 1735-1065 Impact factor: 0.212
Figure 1.A 29-year-old man with underlying chronic hepatitis B and an incidentally detected hepatic nodule. A, On T1-weighted gradient-echo imaging (TR/TE: 3.6/1.4), there was a subtle low signal intensity nodule (upper left, arrow). On gadoxetic acid-enhanced MR imaging, the nodule demonstrated early homogeneous intense enhancement (upper right), subtle peripheral washout during the portal venous phase (lower left), and ring-like peripheral enhancement with a central washout pattern on 20 minutes delayed hepatobiliary phase (lower right). B, Histopathology reported proliferating hepatocytes and bile ductules with fibrous septae on the border compatible with focal nodular hyperplasia.
Figure 2.A 39-year-old man with a history of heavy alcoholism. A, T2-weighted fast-spin echo imaging (TR/TE: 3646.3/107. 0, upper left, arrow), and diffusion weighted imaging (b-factor, 800, upper right) showed a high signal intensity nodule in the subcapsular portion of the right hepatic lobe. On T1-weighted gradient-echo imaging (TR/TE: 3.6/1.4), there was a high signal-intensity nodule with a peripheral halo (middle left). On gadoxetic acid-enhanced MR imaging, the nodule was visualized with early homogeneous enhancement (middle right), washout during the equilibrium phase (lower left), and complete perfusion defect on the 20 minutes delayed hepatobiliary phase (lower right). B, On histopathology (HE stain, high-power field [×200], a fibrous septum was observed in the tumor nodule exhibiting signs of lymphocytic infiltration. The hepatocytes formed one or two cell thick trabecular cords and were cytologically benign proliferating hepatocytes compatible with a diagnosis of focal nodular hyperplasia.