Extrahepatic arterial supply to the liver was readily evident in a large proportion of patients during temporary balloon occlusion of the proper hepatic artery. This finding suggests a need for consideration of extrahepatic arterial supply when angiographic intervention for liver tumors is contemplated.
Five cases of prominent, diffuse dilatation of the main pancreatic duct caused by mucin-hypersecreting carcinoma are reported. Adenocarcinoma was noted mainly within one markedly dilated main pancreatic duct. On endoscopic retrograde pancreatograms, dilated main pancreatic ducts with amorphous or well-defined filling defects resulting from mucin (five patients) or tumor (one patient) were noted. The proximal portion of the main pancreatic duct alone was delineated in three cases because of reflux of contrast material as a result of the presence of excessive mucin and a patulous orifice of the papilla of Vater (major duodenal papilla). Diffuse dilatation of the main pancreatic duct was demonstrated or suggested on computed tomographic (CT) and ultrasound scans. Four patients who underwent operations are alive and free from carcinoma (mean, 50 months after diagnosis). Whenever prominent, diffuse dilatation of the main pancreatic duct is encountered on CT or ultrasound scans, endoscopic retrograde pancreatography is mandatory to permit confirmation or ruling out of mucin-hypersecreting carcinoma of the pancreas.
The radiologic findings are described in six patients with "mucin-hypersecreting" intrahepatic biliary neoplasms (biliary cystadenocarcinoma or papillary cholangiocarcinoma). Massive amounts of mucin were confirmed in the dilated bile ducts at surgery or autopsy. Computed tomography (CT) and ultrasound (US) demonstrated severe dilatation of the intrahepatic bile ducts distal to the tumor in all patients and of extrahepatic ducts in five. On cholangiograms, large, amorphous filling defects caused by retention of mucin were found in the dilated ducts in three patients. The tumor was multilocular and cystic in five patients; in the other patient it was too small to be detected at CT or US. The presence of liver tumor (mostly multilocular and cystic), marked biliary dilatation distal to the tumor, and filling defects in the dilated bile ducts are important findings that indicate a mucin-hypersecreting intrahepatic biliary neoplasm.
Fifty-three patients who had hepatic tumors (24 hepatomas, ten metastases, and 19 cavernous hemangiomas) underwent MR imaging using a 0.35-T superconducting imager. The transverse relaxation time (T2) was calculated from a pair of spin echo images (repetition time [TR] of 1600 msec) with echo delay times (TE) of 35 and 70 msec. The computed T2 value was obtained in a fashion similar to that used to obtain CT numbers with region-of-interest cursors. The mean T2 was 59 +/- 9 msec in hepatomas, 64 +/- 15 msec in metastases, and 100 +/- 30 msec in hemangiomas. The difference between the T2 of hemangioma and that of liver malignancies was statistically significant (P less than .001); however, differentiation between hepatoma and metastases was not possible. The T2 was shorter than 80 msec in all 24 hepatomas and in nine of ten metastases, and was longer than 80 msec in 16 of 19 hemangiomas. Forty-nine of 53 cases (92%) were correctly classified when the borderline of T2 between hemangioma and hepatic malignancies was set at 80 msec. MR with T2 calculation was valuable in differentiating between hemangioma and hepatic malignancies.
Eight cases of choledochal cyst associated with biliary malignancy (gallbladder carcinoma in three and bile duct carcinoma in five) were reviewed to evaluate the roles and limitations of computed tomography (CT) (n = 8), ultrasound (US) (n = 6), cholangiography (n = 8), and angiography (n = 6). In cases of gallbladder carcinoma, both CT and US revealed mass lesions in the gallbladder consistent with cancer. CT also depicted either a mass lesion or an irregular thickened wall in all cases of bile duct carcinoma; however, US failed to demonstrate a thickened wall in one of three cases in which CT findings were positive. Cholangiography universally revealed malunion of the pancreatico-biliary duct, and the findings were suggestive of malignancy in seven cases in which CT depicted abnormalities. Angiography showed tumor stain in three of six cases. Lymph node metastases were present in four cases but were detected preoperatively in only one. One case showing a thickened bile duct wall was erroneously diagnosed as malignancy among 27 cases of choledochal cyst unassociated with biliary malignancy.
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