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©2009 The WJG Press and Baishideng.
World J Gastroenterol. Aug 14, 2009; 15(30): 3748-3756
Published online Aug 14, 2009. doi: 10.3748/wjg.15.3748
Published online Aug 14, 2009. doi: 10.3748/wjg.15.3748
Lesion type | Arterial phase | Portal venous phase | Sinusoidal phase |
Malignant lesions | |||
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | Hyperenhanced, often with prominent delineation of feeding vessels around and inside of the lesion, however in well differentiated tumors sometimes only weak arterial enhancement | Iso- or hypoenhanced, usually rapid contrast wash-out | Mostly hypoenhanced, however in well differentiated tumors some portal venous enhancement may be present |
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCC) | Moderately hyperenhanced | Iso- or hypoenhanced | Mostly hypoenhanced |
Hypervascular metastases (MET) | Hyperenhanced, often restricted to the margin of the lesion | Iso- or hypoenhanced | Always hypoenhanced (black spots) |
Hypovascular metastases (MET) | Not enhanced or only few isolated spots inside of the lesion | Hypoenhanced | Always hypoenhanced (black spots) |
Other malignant | |||
Benign lesions | |||
Hemangioma (typical) | Peripheral nodular enhancement, sharp margin in high-flow hemangiomas: complete filling of the lesion during arterial phase | Slow centripetal progression of the enhancement (‘iris diaphragm sign’), leading to an iso- or hyperenhancedappearance; fill-in can be very slowly (lasting minutes) or rather fast (lasting less than a minute) | More or less complete enhancement, prolonged compared to surrounding liver tissue and therefore hyperenhanced at later time points; enhancement may be incomplete in case of (partial) thrombosis |
Hemangioma (atypical) | Peripheral nodular enhancement, sharp margin or no enhancement (complete thrombosis) or complete enhancement (high flow hemangioma) | Slow centripetal progression of the enhancement (‘iris diaphragm sign’), leading to an iso- or hyperenhanced appearance; fill-in can be very slowly (lasting minutes) or rather fast (lasting less than a minute) | More or less complete enhancement, prolonged compared to surrounding liver tissue and therefore hyperenhanced at later time points; enhancement may be incomplete in case of (partial) thrombosis |
Focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) | Hyperenhanced, with fast centrifugal filling of the lesion; usually a central vessel and radial vascular branches can be delineated, especially in larger lesions (‘spoke and wheel sign’) | Iso- or hyperenhanced | Iso- or hyperenhanced, central scar may become visible |
Hepatic adenoma | Hyperenhanced, frequently with fast centrifugal filling and rapid contrast wash-out; no radial vascular structures visible | Iso- or hyperenhanced; hypoenhanced areas in case of central bleeding or scar | Iso- or hyperenhanced; hypoenhanced areas in case of central bleeding or scar; no central scar or radial intralesional structures |
Large regenerating or dysplastic nodules | Isoenhanced | Isoenhanced | Isoenhanced |
Focal fatty accumulation | Isoenhanced | Isoenhanced | Isoenhanced |
Focal fatty sparing | Isoenhanced | Isoenhanced | Isoenhanced |
Cyst | No enhancement | No enhancement | No enhancement |
Other benign |
- Citation: Trillaud H, Bruel JM, Valette PJ, Vilgrain V, Schmutz G, Oyen R, Jakubowski W, Danes J, Valek V, Greis C. Characterization of focal liver lesions with SonoVue®-enhanced sonography: International multicenter-study in comparison to CT and MRI. World J Gastroenterol 2009; 15(30): 3748-3756
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v15/i30/3748.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.15.3748