| Literature DB >> 26886213 |
Jin Ah Kim1, Hye Sung Ahn1, Haneul Park1, Yoo Rim Seo1, Ju Hyun Seo1, Chang Wook Kim1, Hee Yeon Kim1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Carcinoma, hepatocellular; Esophageal and gastric varices; Infarction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26886213 PMCID: PMC5094920 DOI: 10.3904/kjim.2015.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Intern Med ISSN: 1226-3303 Impact factor: 2.884
Figure 1.(A) An arterial-phase computed tomography (CT) image showing multiple, clustered, hypoattenuating nodules with peripheral rim enhancement in the left hepatic lobe, the caudate lobe, and the periphery of the right lobe. (B) A portal venous-phase CT image also showing multiple, clustered, hypoattenuating nodules with peripheral rim enhancement. The follow-up CT (C, arterial phase; D, portal phase) scan acquired 2 months later showing that the multiple hypoattenuating lesions have resolved. A lipiodol-laden hepatocellular carcinoma surrounded by non-enhancing ablation zone is also noted.
Figure 2.Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of the liver reveal multiple, clustered, nodular lesions with peripheral high signal intensities on (A) T2-weighted image and low signal intensities on (B) unenhanced T1-weighted image. The peripheral portion of these lesions was rim-enhanced during the (C) arterial-, (D) portal-, (E) delayed-, and (F) hepatobiliary-phase MRI images. MRI also show a 1 cm-nodule with high signal intensity on T2-weighted image and low signal intensity on unenhanced T1-weighted image (arrows). This nodule shows arterial enhancement and portal venous washout and appears as a defect in the hepatobiliary phase.