| Literature DB >> 36160830 |
Rajeev Nayan Priyadarshi1, Ramesh Kumar2, Utpal Anand3.
Abstract
In its classic form, amebic liver abscess (ALA) is a mild disease, which responds dramatically to antibiotics and rarely requires drainage. However, the two other forms of the disease, i.e., acute aggressive and chronic indolent usually require drainage. These forms of ALA are frequently reported in endemic areas. The acute aggressive disease is particularly associated with serious complications, such as ruptures, secondary infections, and biliary communications. Laboratory parameters are deranged, with signs of organ failure often present. This form of disease is also associated with a high mortality rate, and early drainage is often required to control the disease severity. In the chronic form, the disease is characterized by low-grade symptoms, mainly pain in the right upper quadrant. Ultrasound and computed tomography (CT) play an important role not only in the diagnosis but also in the assessment of disease severity and identification of the associated complications. Recently, it has been shown that CT imaging morphology can be classified into three patterns, which seem to correlate with the clinical subtypes. Each pattern depicts its own set of distinctive imaging features. In this review, we briefly outline the clinical and imaging features of the three distinct forms of ALA, and discuss the role of percutaneous drainage in the management of ALA. ©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Amebic liver abscess; Biliary communication; Catheter drainage; Complicated liver abscess; Needle aspiration; Pleuropulmonary complication; Refractory liver abscess; Ruptured amebic liver abscess
Year: 2022 PMID: 36160830 PMCID: PMC9453321 DOI: 10.4329/wjr.v14.i8.272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Radiol ISSN: 1949-8470
Distinguishing clinical findings, imaging features and treatment strategy of the three forms of amebic liver abscesses
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| Acute aggressive | Subacute mild | Chronic indolent |
| Presentation | Acute (< 10 d) | Subacute (< 2-4 wk) | Chronic (> 4 wk) |
| Symptoms | Severe symptoms (RUQ pain, fever, toxicity, abdominal distention, leg edema, shock-like syndrome resembling sepsis, jaundice, signs of intraperitoneal or intrathoracic rupture) | Moderate symptoms(usually intermittent fever and RUQ tenderness) | Mild (usually RUQ tenderness, fever if secondary infection) |
| Laboratory tests | Marked leukocytosis (> 20000/μL), abnormal LFT, features of organ failure (hyperbilirubinemia, renal dysfunction) | Transient leukocytosis and transient elevation of LFT (returns to normal after treatment) | Usually normal |
| Imaging features | Incomplete or absent wall, ragged edge, interrupted or no enhancement, septations, heterogeneous content, widespread or wedge-shaped perilesional hypodensity | Relatively smooth outline, rim-enhancing wall with perilesional hypodense “halo” (double-target sign) | Smooth outline, thick non-enhancing wall, faint or no perilesional “halo” |
| Size and number | > 5-10 cm, multiple in over 50% of cases | < 5-10 cm, usually single | > 5-10 cm, usually single |
| Treatment | Antibiotics; Early drainage is often required to control severity | Antibiotic alone suffices in most cases; rapid recovery, drainage when symptoms persist | Mostly pre-treated with antibiotics, drainage not required unless pressure symptoms or secondary infection present |
RUQ: Right upper quadrant; LFT: Liver function test.
Figure 1Computed tomography images. A: Computed tomography (CT) (coronal image) demonstrating the characteristic imaging findings of an acute aggressive abscess (type I pattern) in a 60-year-old man who presented with sepsis-like features and markedly deranged laboratory parameters. There are multiple abscesses in the right lobe with irregular ragged edges, multiple septa and heterogeneous densities indicating partially liquefied tissue. Also, note the presence of a hypodense area in the surrounding parenchyma (asterisk) and right hepatic vein thrombosis (arrowhead). The thickened cecal wall (arrow) and mild ascites are also evident; B: CT of a typical case of subacute mild disease. The laboratory profile was near normal. The axial image shows an abscess in the left lobe with a well-defined wall showing rim enhancement (type II pattern). This patient presented with mild abdominal pain after 20 d of symptoms; C: CT image of a chronic indolent abscess (type III pattern). Coronal image of a 24-year-old man showing a large abscess with a thick non-enhancing wall in the right lobe. He had persistent pain in the right upper quadrant for two months despite complete resolution of fever and normalization of laboratory tests after metronidazole therapy.
Figure 2Computed tomography image (coronal view) of a patient who presented with productive cough and mild upper abdominal pain for more than four weeks. Note the rupture of a subdiaphragmatic abscess into the lung resulting in the formation of a lung abscess. The air-fluid level in the lung abscess (arrow) indicates fistulous communication between the lung abscess and the bronchus.
Figure 3Computed tomography image. A: Computed tomography image (coronal view) demonstrating a contained rupture. A fluid collection that is localized in the subphrenic space (asterisk). Note the wide rent in the abscess (arrow). Additional imaging features of an aggressive disease in this image are the presence of ascites and thrombus in a segment of the hepatic vein (arrowhead); B: Free intraperitoneal rupture in a 40-year-old man who presented with features of generalized peritonitis. Coronal computed tomography image showing a large amebic abscess with an irregular edge in the right lobe and diffuse intraperitoneal fluid collection (arrows).
Figure 4Axial computed tomography of a 60-year-old man showing a large abscess in segment IV of the liver near the porta hepatis. Note the duct dilation (arrows) that resulted from rupture of the abscess into the central bile ducts. He was managed with catheter drainage. Bilious fluid draining through the catheter was observed for several weeks in this patient.