Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Evaluation of Benign vs Malignant Hepatic Lesions.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Evaluation of Benign vs Malignant Hepatic Lesions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Evaluation of Benign vs Malignant Hepatic Lesions With Positron Emission Tomography Arch Surg. 1998;133(5):510-516. doi:10.1001/archsurg.133.5.510 A 74-year-old man with right upper quadrant pain at initial evaluation. A, The computed tomographic (CT) scan demonstrates a large necrotic mass in the right lobe of the liver (arrow) and a smaller lesion in the left (not shown). B, The positron emission tomographic image (slice corresponding to the CT slice) shows that the lesion in the right lobe had a large photopenic center with a rim of marked uptake (lesion-to-normal liver background ratio, 6.5; standard uptake value, 9.6) (arrow). The patient was explored surgically and found to have a yeast abscess. Figure Legend:

2 Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Evaluation of Benign vs Malignant Hepatic Lesions With Positron Emission Tomography Arch Surg. 1998;133(5):510-516. doi:10.1001/archsurg.133.5.510 Distribution of lesion-to-normal liver background (L/B) ratios in patients with different types of liver lesions. The horizontal line represents an L/B ratio of 2. Figure Legend:

3 Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Evaluation of Benign vs Malignant Hepatic Lesions With Positron Emission Tomography Arch Surg. 1998;133(5):510-516. doi:10.1001/archsurg.133.5.510 A 46-year-old woman with gastric obstruction at initial examination. A, The computed tomographic (CT) scan demonstrates a large exophytic mass protruding from the left lobe of the liver (arrow). B, Scintigraphy with labeled red blood cells (coronal single photon emission CT slice) demonstrates delayed blood pooling consistent with a cavernous hemangioma (arrow). C, Positron emission tomographic image (axial slice corresponding to the CT slice) shows uptake at the same level as the liver background, but inhomogeneous uptake (arrow). The lesion was resected surgically to relieve the symptoms. Histology confirmed a cavernous hemangioma. Figure Legend:

4 Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Evaluation of Benign vs Malignant Hepatic Lesions With Positron Emission Tomography Arch Surg. 1998;133(5):510-516. doi:10.1001/archsurg.133.5.510 A 53-year-old man with viral hepatitis type C and cirrhosis with right upper quadrant pain at initial examination. A, Computed tomographic scan shows a large, poorly delineated lesion in the right lobe of the liver, and biopsy demonstrated a hepatocellular carcinoma. B, Positron emission tomographic image (top left, transaxial slice; bottom left, coronal slice; right, sagittal slice) shows marked uptake in the liver lesion (lesion-to-normal liver background ratio, 6.3; standard uptake value, 12.6) (arrowhead) and a focal area of increased uptake in the thoracic spine suspicious for a bone metastasis (arrow). C, The bone scan demonstrated uptake in the liver (arrow), but no skeletal metastases. D, The magnetic resonance image confirms the vertebral metastasis (arrow). Figure Legend:


Download ppt "Date of download: 6/20/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Evaluation of Benign vs Malignant Hepatic Lesions."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google