Small hyperintense hepatic lesions on T1-weighted images in patients with cirrhosis: evaluation with serial MRI and imaging features for clinical benignity
- PMID: 17524587
- DOI: 10.1016/j.mri.2007.03.029
Small hyperintense hepatic lesions on T1-weighted images in patients with cirrhosis: evaluation with serial MRI and imaging features for clinical benignity
Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate the frequency and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features of clinically benign, small (<2 cm) hyperintense hepatic lesions in the cirrhotic liver on T1-weighted MR images seen at serial MRI.
Materials and methods: This study included 189 patients with cirrhosis, who underwent hepatic MRI more than twice with an interval of at least 12 months. The initial MR images were reviewed for the presence of small hyperintense lesions on T1-weighted images. The size, location and signal intensity on T2-weighted images as well as enhancement patterns of the corresponding lesions were recorded.
Results: On the initial T1-weighted MR images, 43 small hyperintense hepatic lesions were detected in 23 (12%) of 189 patients. Twelve (28%) of 43 lesions showed early enhancement and were pathologically diagnosed as hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) during the follow-up period. Thirty-one (72%) of 43 lesions showed no early enhancement with various signal intensity on T2-weighted images (hyperintensity=4, isointensity=20, hypointensity=7). Among these 31 lesions, 12 showed no interval change, while 11 disappeared (n=10) or decreased in size (n=1). In the remaining eight lesions, seven were diagnosed as HCC on the basis of pathologic confirmation or the interval growth.
Conclusion: Small hyperintense hepatic lesions on T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images without early enhancement on the arterial-phase contrast-enhanced dynamic studies in patients with cirrhosis usually showed no interval growth or disappeared during the serial MRI. These lesions with additional findings of iso- or hypointensity on the T2-weighted MR images without "washout effect" on the contrast-enhanced equilibrium-phase images may more frequently be clinically benign or hyperplastic nodules than HCCs.
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