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Guess-a-Case

Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver

Overview

Sex: female
Age: 45 years

History
Patient had no relevant previous history. Incidental finding on an ultrasound performed for ill-defined abdominal pain.

Laboratory data
No abnormalities.

Physical findings
None.

Case text
Ill-defined abdominal pain. Incidental finding of a hepatic lesion on ultrasound.

Imaging Details

Image 1-4
Arterial and portal venous phase CT images of the liver .
Images 1,2: Arterial phase - 30s delay. Images 3,4: Portal venous phase - 40s delay.

Image 5-7
Axial breathhold T1 FLASH images of the liver (Images 5,6).
Coronal breathold T2 FSE images of the liver (Image 3).
Images 5,6: Axial breathold T1-weighted FLASH sequence: TR/TE; 160/6.6ms, flip angle 75°, 5mm slice thickness, matrix 129 x 256.
Image 7: Coronal breathold T2-weighted FSE sequence: TR/TE; 3300/138ms, flip angle 180°; slice thickness 5mm; matrix 116 x 256.

Image 8-13
Coronal and axial breathhold T1-weighted FLASH images of the liver, 20 minutes and 24 hours following infusion of contrast.
Coronal and axial breathold T1 FLASH sequence: TR/TE; 160/6.6ms, flip angle 75°,5mm slice thickness, matrix 129 x 256.
Image 13: Axial breathhold T1-weighted FLASH image 24 hours following infusion of contrast.

Questions and Answers

Show answers


Image 1-4

1. What abnormalities are seen on Images 1 and 2?

Lobulated, well-defined, hypervascular mass in the right lobe of the liver, with prominent peripheral vessels, and a central non-enhancing scar.

2. What happens to these masses in the portal venous phase of enhancement on Images 3 and 4?

There is rapid washout of contrast from both masses of the liver during the portal venous phase.

3. What is your diagnosis? What is the differential diagnosis?

The larger mass has the characteristic CT appearances of focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH). The smaller mass in the left lobe of the liver could represent multifocal FNH. It may be an incidental haemangioma.

4. Is a central scar specific for FNH?

No. Central scars can be seen in  several primary liver lesions, including a fibrolamellar carcinoma and cavernous haemangioma. Central scars are very rarely seen in hepatic adenomas.


Image 5-7

5 What abnormalities are seen on Images 5,6?

Lobulated, well-defined, mass in right lobe of the liver with prominent peripheral vessels. The signal intensity  is similar to the liver, and homogeneous with a central low signal scar.

6. What abnormalities are seen on Image 7?

The lesion is difficult to see on T2-weigthed imaging as it has a similar low signal intensity to normal liver tissue. However high signal slow flow in the surrounding vessels are seen to be displaced around the mass. Note is also made of some high signal in the central scar which is characteristic of FNH.


Image 8-13

7. How many lesions can be seen on the early phase post Teslascan images (Images 8,10,12)?

Three lesions are seen on the 24 hour images. The largest lesion is now more hyperintense than the normal liver. Note that there is no uptake in the central scar.
In addition, a small lesion is seen anteriorly within the left lobe of the liver which is hyperintense and contains a low signal central scar (see Image 13).
There is also a hyperintense lesion more inferiorly in the left lobe of the liver, just to the left of the porta, which retains Teslascan uniformly on the delayed images (Image 11).

8. Why do these lesions take up and appear to retain Teslascan?

Focal nodular hyperplasia contains mainly normal hepatocytes, which explains why Teslascan is taken up in the first instance to a degree, which is similar to the normal liver on the early phase scans. However, these lesions do not have  a normal biliary drainage, and therefore the contrast agent is not dealt with as efficiently as in normal liver. These lesions therefore are more conspicuous on the 24 hour scans. This aids in detecting the multifocal nature of the FNH in this particular case


Discussion

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Image 1

Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 1
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 2
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 3
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 4
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 5
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 6
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 7
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 8
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 9
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 10
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 11
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 12
Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver, Image 13