Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Section 1 Diaphragm and adjacent structures
- Section 2 Liver
- Case 11 Pseudocirrhosis of treated breast cancer metastases
- Case 12 Pseudocirrhosis of fulminant hepatic failure
- Case 13 Nutmeg liver
- Case 14 Nodular regenerative hyperplasia
- Case 15 Pseudoprogression of treated hepatic metastases
- Case 16 Pseudothrombosis of the portal vein
- Case 17 Biliary hamartomas
- Case 18 Nodular focal fatty infiltration of the liver
- Case 19 Nodular focal fatty sparing of the liver
- Case 20 Hepatocellular carcinoma mimicking focal nodular hyperplasia
- Case 21 Paradoxical signal gain in the liver
- Section 3 Biliary system
- Section 4 Spleen
- Section 5 Pancreas
- Section 6 Adrenal glands
- Section 7 Kidneys
- Section 8 Retroperitoneum
- Section 9 Gastrointestinal tract
- Section 10 Peritoneal cavity
- Section 11 Ovaries
- Section 12 Uterus and vagina
- Section 13 Bladder
- Section 14 Pelvic soft tissues
- Section 15 Groin
- Section 16 Bone
- Index
- References
Case 18 - Nodular focal fatty infiltration of the liver
from Section 2 - Liver
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Section 1 Diaphragm and adjacent structures
- Section 2 Liver
- Case 11 Pseudocirrhosis of treated breast cancer metastases
- Case 12 Pseudocirrhosis of fulminant hepatic failure
- Case 13 Nutmeg liver
- Case 14 Nodular regenerative hyperplasia
- Case 15 Pseudoprogression of treated hepatic metastases
- Case 16 Pseudothrombosis of the portal vein
- Case 17 Biliary hamartomas
- Case 18 Nodular focal fatty infiltration of the liver
- Case 19 Nodular focal fatty sparing of the liver
- Case 20 Hepatocellular carcinoma mimicking focal nodular hyperplasia
- Case 21 Paradoxical signal gain in the liver
- Section 3 Biliary system
- Section 4 Spleen
- Section 5 Pancreas
- Section 6 Adrenal glands
- Section 7 Kidneys
- Section 8 Retroperitoneum
- Section 9 Gastrointestinal tract
- Section 10 Peritoneal cavity
- Section 11 Ovaries
- Section 12 Uterus and vagina
- Section 13 Bladder
- Section 14 Pelvic soft tissues
- Section 15 Groin
- Section 16 Bone
- Index
- References
Summary
Imaging description
Focal fatty infiltration of the liver is usually easily recognized based on the characteristic findings of a focal lesion with a geographic shape adjacent to the porta hepatis or fissure for the ligamentum teres that may contain non-distorted traversing blood vessels [1]. Occasionally, focal fat is nodular and located in other locations in the liver. Such atypical nodular focal fatty infiltration may result in an appearance of echogenic lesions at ultrasound or hypodense lesions at CT that mimic metastases (Figures 18.1–18.2) [1–6].
Importance
Nodular focal fatty infiltration may mimic metastases, leading to patient anxiety and unnecessary investigations in pursuit of a non-existent primary site.
Typical clinical scenario
Nodular focal fatty infiltration is typically seen as an incidental finding in patients being imaged for unrelated reasons, but may occasionally be seen with patients with known causes of diffuse fatty infiltration such as diabetes or alcohol abuse (Figure 18.3).
Differential diagnosis
A target-like appearance with central echogenicity on ultrasound and central hyperdensity on contrast-enhanced CT has been described [2–4] but would not appear sufficiently distinctive to allow a confident diagnosis. MRI is often critical to the diagnosis by demonstrating signal loss on opposed phase imaging, and the absence of abnormal enhancement on post-contrast imaging that might suggest other focal hepatic lesions that may contain microscopic fat, such as focal nodular hyperplasia, adenoma, or hepatocellular carcinoma [1, 4]. With respect to these other focal lesions, it should be noted that fat occurs in 35 to 77% of adenomas, up to 35% of small hepatocellular carcinomas, and is extremely rare in focal nodular hyperplasia and usually patchy rather than uniform [7–10].
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Pearls and Pitfalls in Abdominal ImagingPseudotumors, Variants and Other Difficult Diagnoses, pp. 54 - 59Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010