Benign Liver Lesions
Haemangioma
- Usually a small single lesion
- Greater incidence in females
Clinical presentation
- Usually asymptomatic - incidental
Investigations
- USS - echogenic spot, well demarcated
- CT - venous enhancement from periphery to centre
- MRI - high intensity area
Management
Focal nodular hyperplasia
- Results from a localized hyperplastic hepatocyte response to an underlying congenital arteriovenous malformation
- Classically a central scar containing a large artery with branches radiating to periphery
- Contains all the liver ultrastructure - sinusoids, bile ductulus, Kupffer cells
- More common in young and middle-aged women
Clinical presentation
- May cause minimal epigastric/RUQ pain
Investigations
- USS - nodule with varying echogenicity
- CT - hypervascular mass with central scar
- MRI - iso or hypo intense lesion
- FNA - normal hepatocytes and Kupffer cells with central core
Management
Hepatic adenoma
- Benign neoplasm composed of normal hepatocytes
- No portal vein, central tracts or bile ducts
- Most are solitary fat containing lesions
- Associated with contraceptive hormones and anabolic steroids
- Multiple adenomas is a rare condition associated with glycogen storage diseases
Clinical presentation
- May have RUQ pain (size related)
- May present with rupture, haemorrhage, or malignant transformation
- Malignant transformation risk higher in males
Investigations
- CT - diffuse arterial enhancement
- MRI - hypo or hyper intense lesion
Management
- Males (irrespective of size) → surgical excision
- Females - repeat imaging after 6 months
- If <5cm or reducing in size → annual MRI
- If >5cm or increase in size → surgical excision
Made with Bullet