| Literature DB >> 35757495 |
Ye Rin Kim1, Ji Eun Lee1, Min Jung Jung1.
Abstract
We present an atypical case of a patient with hepatic hemangiomas showing fluid-fluid levels on computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). None of the lesions showed contrast enhancement, mimicking complicated hepatic cysts or metastasis with hemorrhagic content. On contrast-enhanced ultrasound the lesions showed peripheral nodular enhancement with complete fill-in on late phases, suggestive of hepatic hemangioma. Teaching point: Contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CE-US) may be useful in diagnosing atypical hepatic hemangioma showing fluid-fluid levels on computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: computed tomography; contrast-enhanced ultrasonography; fluid-fluid level; hepatic hemangioma; magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2022 PMID: 35757495 PMCID: PMC9187241 DOI: 10.5334/jbsr.2824
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Belg Soc Radiol ISSN: 2514-8281 Impact factor: 1.912
Figure 1Contrast-enhanced CT image in portal phase (A) shows rounded, non-enhancing cystlike lesion (arrows) in liver segment five, with fluid-fluid level (arrowhead) on unenhanced CT image (B).
Figure 2T2-weighted (A) and unenhanced T1-weighted MRI (B) show a round, well-defined cystic lesion in liver segment five (arrows) containing fluid-fluid level (arrowheads). There is no evidence of contrast enhancement from arterial (C) to delayed phase (D), and with signal defect on hepatobiliary phase imaging (E).
Figure 3(A) B-mode ultrasound with MR fusion guidance shows a solid homogeneous hyperechoic lesion in liver segment five (arrows). On contrast-enhanced ultrasound, (B) portal-phase image shows peripheral nodular contrast enhancement (arrowhead), and complete fill-in and without washout on delayed-phase (C).