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©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Surg Proced. Mar 28, 2014; 4(1): 13-20
Published online Mar 28, 2014. doi: 10.5412/wjsp.v4.i1.13
Published online Mar 28, 2014. doi: 10.5412/wjsp.v4.i1.13
P | Primary lesion localized to the liver |
PX | Primary lesion cannot be assessed |
P0 | No detectable hepatic lesion |
P1 | Peripheral hepatic lesion with no proximal hepatic vascular or biliary involvement |
P2 | Central hepatic lesion with proximal involvement of vessels or biliary ducts in one lobe1 |
P3 | Central hepatic lesion with involvement of hilar vessels or biliary ducts in both lobes or with involvement of two hepatic veins |
P4 | Hepatic lesion with extension along the vessels2 and biliary tree |
N | Extrahepatic involvement of neighboring organs or tissues [diaphragm, lung, pleura, pericardium, heart, gastric or duodenal wall, adrenal gland, peritoneum, retroperitoneum, parietal wall (muscles, skin, bone), pancreas, regional lymph nodes, hepatic ligaments, kidney] |
NX | Cannot be evaluated |
N0 | No regional involvement |
N1 | Regional involvement of contiguous organs or tissues |
M | Absence or presence of distant metastasis (in lung, distant lymph nodes, spleen, central nervous system, orbits, bone, skin, muscle, kidney, distant peritoneum, and retroperitoneum) |
MX | Not completely evaluated |
M0 | No metastasis3 |
M1 | Metastasis |
- Citation: Kantarci M, Pirimoglu B, Kizrak Y. Diagnostic imaging and interventional procedures in a growing problem: Hepatic alveolar echinococcosis. World J Surg Proced 2014; 4(1): 13-20
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2219-2832/full/v4/i1/13.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5412/wjsp.v4.i1.13