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  • Focal nodular hyperplasia a...
    Ruppert-Kohlmayr, A J; Uggowitzer, M M; Kugler, C; Zebedin, D; Schaffler, G; Ruppert, G S

    American journal of roentgenology (1976), 06/2001, Letnik: 176, Številka: 6
    Journal Article

    Differences of attenuation and enhancement patterns in focal nodular hyperplasia and hepatocellular adenoma were evaluated and quantified using triphasic single-slice helical CT. Forty-five histologically proven focal nodular hyperplasias in 27 patients and 18 hepatocellular adenomas in six patients were examined with helical CT. Quantitative evaluation included the following: attenuation of lesions, scar, and liver parenchyma during unenhanced, arterial (20 sec after injection), and portal venous phases (70 sec after injection); relative enhancement of lesions and liver (the ratio between attenuation in arterial phase and portal venous phase, respectively, and attenuation in unenhanced phase); and the prevalence of scar and its central vessel in focal nodular hyperplasia. The study showed no significant difference between mean attenuation values of focal nodular hyperplasia (mean +/- SD, 51.2 +/- 5.9 H) and hepatocellular adenoma (mean +/- SD, 56.3 +/- 7.8 H) in the unenhanced phase. In the arterial phase attenuation values were significantly higher in focal nodular hyperplasia (mean +/- SD, 117.9 +/- 15.1 H) than in hepatocellular adenoma (mean +/- SD, 80.1 +/- 10.5 H). In the portal venous phase no significant differences in attenuation values were detected between focal nodular hyperplasia (mean +/- SD, 112.1 +/- 20.4 H) and hepatocellular adenoma (mean +/- SD, 110.2 +/- 12.9 H). For enhancement parameter thresholds separating focal nodular hyperplasia from hepatocellular adenoma, the following were found: the relative enhancement was higher in 100% of the focal nodular hyperplasias and lower than or equal to 1.6 (accuracy, 96%) in 87% of the hepatocellular adenomas. Triphasic helical CT combined with quantitative evaluation of liver lesions offers the possibility of detecting differences in liver lesions that are visually similar on CT. The attenuation and relative enhancement in the arterial phase show significant differences that make accurate differentiation between focal nodular hyperplasia and hepatocellular adenoma possible.