The hepatic morphology in this group of non-cirrhotic portal hypertension patients was an abnormal remodelling of the liver associated with the frequent development of irregular hyperplastic nodules and frequent obstructions of the pre- and intrahepatic vascular lumens. It was very difficult to apply the nomenclature proposed by international experts.
The hepatocellular nodules seen in livers from patients with Budd-Chiari syndrome share morphological characteristics with large regenerative nodules, focal nodular hyperplasia and hepatocellular adenomas. Their multiplicity, the existence of mixed lesions, the frequent hepatocellular regenerative background as well as the frequently associated portal venous obstructions suggest that these nodules are regenerative in nature and conditioned by an uneven blood perfusion throughout the liver. In their differential diagnosis, the clinicopathological context in which they occur is of paramount importance and should allow recognition that those resembling adenomas may not be true neoplasms.
This report describes a 31-week stillborn female infant with placental mesenchymal dysplasia (PMD) in association with hepatic mesenchymal hamartoma (HMH) and pulmonary hamartoma. Placental mesenchymal dysplasia was initially misdiagnosed as a partial mole. However, histologically, no trophoblastic proliferation or inclusions were observed. Differential diagnosis of the hepatic mass with similar tumors is discussed. To our knowledge, this is the first case of lung hamartoma reported in a fetus and the first case related to PMD and HMH. A common anomalous development of the mesoderm, a reparative post-injury process and a genetic mechanism, have been proposed to explain their pathogenesis.
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