Author:
Arai Jun,Shimozuma Yuu,Otoyama Yumi,Sugiura Ikuya,Nakajima Yoko,Hayashi Eiichi,Kajiwara Atsushi,Omori Risa,Uozumi Shojiro,Miyashita Miyuki,Uchikoshi Manabu,Doi Hiroyoshi,Sakaki Masashi,Wang Tianpeng,Eguchi Junichi,Ito Takayoshi,Kurihara Toshikazu,Munechika Jiro,Gokan Takehiko,Saito Koji,Miura Sakiko,Tate Genshu,Takimoto Masafumi,Yoshida Hitoshi
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Hepatic epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (HEH) is rare; it is reported in < 1 person in 1,000,000 individuals. For accurate diagnosis, information regarding multiple graphic modalities in HEH is required. However, there is very little information concerning Sonazoid® contrast enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) in HEH.
Case presentation
The present report describes the histologically proven three HEH cases evaluated using Sonazoid® CEUS. Case 1 was a 33-year-old female patient with no relevant past medical history, who experienced right upper quadrant pain. Conventional abdominal US revealed multiple low echoic liver nodules with vague borderlines. In CEUS, the vascularity of the nodules was similar to that seen in the neighboring normal liver. Later in the portal venous and late phases (PVLP) and post vascular phase, washout of Sonazoid® was detected in the nodules. Case 2 was a 93-year-old female patient with a previous medical history including operations for breast cancer and ovary cancer in her 50’s. Conventional abdominal US revealed multiple low echoic nodules, some of which contained cystic lesions. In the early vascular phase of CEUS, nodules excluding the central anechoic regions were enhanced from peripheral sites. Although the enhancement inside the nodules persisted in both the PVLP and post vascular phase, anechoic areas in the center of some nodules were not enhanced at all. Case 3 was a 39-year-old male patient presented with right upper-quadrant pain, without any relevant past medical history. Conventional abdominal US revealed multiple low echoic liver nodules. In the early vascular phase of CEUS, nodules were gradually enhanced from the peripheral sites as ringed enhancement. Sonazoid®was washed out from the nodules in the PVLP and post vascular phase.
Conclusions
The most important feature was peripheral enhancement in the early vascular phase. In case 2, the enhancement of the parenchyma of liver nodules persisted even in the PVLP; indicating the lower degree of malignant potential than others. Actually, the tumors did not extend without any treatment in case 2. Since case 2 is the first case report of HEH with cystic lesions, in patients with liver nodules including cystic lesions, HEH is a potential diagnosis.
Funder
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Gastroenterology,General Medicine
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