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. 2000 Dec;217(3):750-6.
doi: 10.1148/radiology.217.3.r00dc13750.

Nontumorous hepatic arterial-portal venous shunts: MR imaging findings

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Nontumorous hepatic arterial-portal venous shunts: MR imaging findings

J S Yu et al. Radiology. 2000 Dec.

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the magnetic resonance (MR) imaging findings of small nontumorous hepatic arterial-portal venous (arterioportal) shunts in the liver.

Materials and methods: MR images in 25 patients with 38 small nontumorous arterioportal shunts verified with surgery or follow-up imaging were included in this study. The causes of arterioportal shunts were iatrogenic causes in 11 patients and/or cirrhotic changes in the remaining patients. Nonenhanced T1- and T2-weighted images and multiphase contrast material-enhanced dynamic images were retrospectively reviewed and compared with conventional hepatic arteriograms to determine the MR characteristics related to the focal hemodynamic changes.

Results: On arterial-dominant-phase dynamic MR images, 29 (76%) of the 38 arteriographically suggested nontumorous arterioportal shunts displayed abnormal findings distinguished against the surrounding hepatic parenchyma, including wedge-shaped (n = 14), nodular (n = 9), or irregularly outlined (n = 6) areas of focal contrast enhancement. The signal intensity on nonenhanced T1- and T2-weighted images of the corresponding areas appeared unremarkable except for three wedge-shaped high-signal-intensity areas (three [8%] of 38) on T2-weighted images accompanied by prolonged contrast enhancement. Most (24 [83%] of 29) areas of abnormal signal intensity were located at the periphery of the liver parenchyma.

Conclusion: A small nontumorous arterioportal shunt should be considered one of the causes of focal parenchymal hyperperfusion abnormalities on contrast-enhanced dynamic MR images of the liver in the absence of abnormal signal intensity on static MR images.

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