Consider iatrogenic infarction of hepatic mass or liver parenchyma
Consider retained absorbable oxidized cellulose (Surgicel)
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Embolized, iodinated, poppyseed oil (Ethiodol, Lipiodol)
May mimic calcified or hypervascular mass on plain radiography or CT, respectively
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Treated tumor often undergoes progressive volume loss and fibrosis
May simulate focal confluent fibrosis, peripheral cholangiocarcinoma, or cirrhosis
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Consider prior resection of portions of liver
May have similar appearance to congenital absence or hypoplasia of hepatic segments
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Iatrogenic arterioportal (AP) fistula
Complication of percutaneous liver biopsy
May simulate other vascular lesions, including tumor
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Small peripheral AP shunts are common, spontaneous findings in cirrhotic liver
TOP DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSES
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Portal venous gas with bowel infarction
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Focal confluent fibrosis
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Cholangiocarcinoma (peripheral)
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Regenerative and dysplastic nodules
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Other causes of transient hepatic attenuation (THADs) and intensity (THIDs) differences
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Congenital absence of hepatic segments
TERMINOLOGY
Definitions
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Iatrogenic changes to hepatic morphology that may cause or simulate pathologic conditions
IMAGING
Imaging Recommendations
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Best imaging tool
Imaging test that shows morphology and hemodynamic characteristics of hepatic lesion
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Protocol advice
Correlate with medical records and history of prior intervention
CT Findings
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Gas collection in hepatic or perihepatic lesion
Abscess is primary concern, but also consider iatrogenic causes
Iatrogenic infarction of hepatic mass or liver parenchyma
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Sudden death of hepatic (or other) tissue releases gas, ± coexisting infection
Examples: Radiofrequency ablation, hepatic arterial chemoembolization, hepatic arterial occlusion (intentional or not)
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Gas released from sudden death of tissue
Does not imply infection of tissue
Clinical syndrome (fever, pain, leukocytosis) may mimic sepsis
Retained absorbable oxidized cellulose (Surgicel)
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May be placed intraoperatively and left in place to control bleeding
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Appears as spherical, sponge-like collection of gas bubbles with little or no fluid component
Tightly packed gas bubbles ± linear arrangement; no enhancing wall
Fixed location and appearance on sequential exams
Highly echogenic mass on US with posterior reverberation artifact
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Iatrogenic causes of portal venous gas
Any procedure resulting in sudden death of hepatic parenchyma may release hepatic parenchymal ± portal venous gas
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Examples: Surgical ligation or transcatheter occlusion of hepatic artery (deliberate or unintentional)
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Might be used to devascularize hypervascular liver mass, benign (e.g., focal nodular hyperplasia or adenoma) or malignant