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Case 16 - Pseudothrombosis of the portal vein

from Section 2 - Liver

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

Fergus V. Coakley
Affiliation:
University of California, San Francisco
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Summary

Imaging description

On early post-contrast CT studies of the abdomen, the portal vein sometimes appears to contain a central ill-defined filling defect that disappears on more superior images. This “pseudothrombosis” is due to the laminar mixing of enhanced blood from the splenic vein with less enhanced blood from the superior mesenteric vein (Figure 16.1) [1]. This pseudolesion resolves on later phases of enhancement.

Importance

This may be mistaken for a true tumor or bland thrombus of the portal vein, resulting in unnecessary follow-up investigations and patient anxiety.

Typical clinical scenario

Pseudothrombosis of the portal vein is generally only seen on early post-contrast CT images, such as CT arteriography.

Differential diagnosis

Occasionally arterioportal shunting in the liver can cause premature opacification of a portal vein branch, and the resulting mixing of opacified and unopacified portal venous blood can result in a “pseudothrombus” (Figure 16.2). Other than these considerations, cross-sectional imaging has high accuracy in the identification of portal vein thrombus, and the only main limitation is that a diminutive portal vein can sometimes be mistaken for chronic thrombosis [1].

Teaching point

The appearance of an apparent filling defect in the portal vein on early post-contrast CT images should be correlated with later phase images, because occasionally mixing artifacts may result in pseudothrombosis in the arterial phase.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pearls and Pitfalls in Abdominal Imaging
Pseudotumors, Variants and Other Difficult Diagnoses
, pp. 48 - 49
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Shah, TU, Semelka, RC, Voultsinos, V, et al. Accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging for preoperative detection of portal vein thrombosis in liver transplant candidates. Liver Transpl 2006; 12: 1682–1688.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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