• Nenhum resultado encontrado

Giant cavernous hemangioma coexistent with diffuse hepatic hemangiomatosis presenting as portal vein thrombosis and hepatic lobar atrophy

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2017

Share "Giant cavernous hemangioma coexistent with diffuse hepatic hemangiomatosis presenting as portal vein thrombosis and hepatic lobar atrophy"

Copied!
6
0
0

Texto

Imagem

Fig. 2. Follow-up ultrasonography (US), computed tomography (CT), and  magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the same patient 2 months after  symptoms had begun
Fig. 2. F, G. Serial gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted MR axial images using a fat-suppressed, 3-dimensional volumetric interpolated breath- breath-hold examination sequence (TR/TE 3.5/1.5 ms, flip angle 9°) show discontinuous nodular enhancement on the arte

Referências

Documentos relacionados

Ultrasonography with contrast showing diffuse illing of the nodule during arterial phase, characteristic of hepatic hemangioma.. In one patient with a solitary nodule

tive day following laparoscopic splenectomy, showing thrombosis of the splenic vein, main portal vein, right and left portal veins, and portions of the smaller intrahepatic

of the left portal vein branch, up to the periphery of the left lateral segment, where it was observed vascular dila- tion and prominence of the adjacent left hepatic vein,

R.  norvegicus infected with Calodium  hepaticum. A) Hepatic parenchyma characterized by the portal vein (PV), arterioles (a) and venules (v), and lobes compressed by the

A , Sham group, regular arrayed hepatic cords, as well as the uniform-sized hepatic cells with round nuclei and clear karyolemmas were observed; B , LPS group, the central vein and

With this caveat in mind, DUS can adequately diagnose hepatic schistosomiasis, characterize the portal vein flow, and display portal hypertension related findings, i.e.,

In the manuscript “Transection of the hepatic parenchyma associated or not with the contralateral portal vein branch ligature and its effect in liver regeneration”, DOI

Right portal vein ligation combined with in situ splitting induces rapid left lateral liver lobe hypertrophy enabling 2-staged extended right hepatic resection in