Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Benign Liver Lesions

Benign Liver Lesions

Benign Liver Lesions

On this page

Benign Liver Lesions: Intro & Imaging - Lesion Spotting 101

Benign liver lesions are common, non-cancerous growths. Most are asymptomatic, found incidentally during scans for other issues. Accurate diagnosis relies heavily on imaging.

  • Incidence: High; many discovered serendipitously.
  • Typical Patient: Often asymptomatic; specific demographics vary by lesion type (e.g., FNH in young women).
  • Key Diagnostic Features:
    • Imaging is paramount: USG (initial), CT, MRI for detailed characterization.
    • Specific contrast enhancement patterns are crucial for differentiation.
    • Biopsy rarely needed if imaging is classic and no risk factors.
  • When to Worry/Intervene:
    • Presence of symptoms (pain, abdominal fullness).
    • Large size (e.g., >5 cm, lesion-dependent).
    • Diagnostic uncertainty or atypical features.
    • Risk/presence of complications (hemorrhage, rupture).

⭐ Most benign liver lesions are asymptomatic and discovered incidentally during imaging for other reasons.

Cavernous Hemangioma - Bloody Good Bumps

  • Most common benign liver tumor; often incidental.

  • F > M; typically 30-50 years.

  • Imaging:

    • US: Hyperechoic.
    • CT/MRI (Contrast): Peripheral, discontinuous, nodular enhancement with centripetal fill-in. Delayed persistent enhancement.
  • Management:

    • Asymptomatic: Observe. Biopsy contraindicated (bleeding risk).
    • Symptomatic/Complications (e.g., Kasabach-Merritt syndrome - rare): Resection, enucleation, embolization.

⭐ Characteristic 'peripheral discontinuous nodular enhancement with centripetal fill-in' on CT/MRI is virtually diagnostic.

Focal Nodular Hyperplasia (FNH) - Scar Star Power

  • Second most common benign liver lesion.
  • Arises from a hyperplastic response to anomalous arteries.
  • Key imaging feature: Central scar.
    • CT: Hypo/isoattenuating scar.
    • MRI: Scar typically T1 hypointense, T2 hyperintense.
  • Enhancement pattern (CECT/MRI):
    • Arterial phase: Intense, homogeneous hyperenhancement (lesion, not scar).
    • Portal venous/Delayed phases: Iso/hyperdense to liver; scar may show delayed enhancement.
  • Generally no malignant potential; observation is typical.
  • 📌 "Scar Star": Central scar is the star of the show!

⭐ Focal Nodular Hyperplasia (FNH) often shows avid arterial enhancement and the presence of a T2-hyperintense central scar on MRI.

FNH MRI with central scar and multiphase enhancement

Hepatocellular Adenoma (HCA) - Risky Business Lesions

  • Key associations: Oral Contraceptive Pills (OCPs), anabolic steroids, glycogen storage diseases.
  • Significant risks: Spontaneous hemorrhage (can be life-threatening), malignant transformation to HCC. MRI of hepatocellular adenoma in child

HCA Subtypes & Key Implications:

SubtypeFeatures / MarkersMalignant Risk
HNF1α-inactivatedSteatosis; low bleed/malignancy riskLow
Inflammatory (IHCA)Sinusoidal dilatation, ↑SAA, ↑CRP; low-mod riskLow-Moderate
β-catenin mutated (b-HCA)Cytologic atypia, cholestasis; high riskHigh
UnclassifiedVariable featuresVariable

Management Strategy:

Hepatic Cysts & Others - Bubble Trouble & Co.

  • Simple Cysts:
    • Common, congenital.
    • Imaging: Anechoic (US), water attenuation (CT), T2 bright (MRI).
    • Usually asymptomatic; manage if symptomatic (large, compressing).

    ⭐ Simple hepatic cysts are typically anechoic on ultrasound with posterior acoustic enhancement and well-defined thin walls.

  • Biliary Hamartomas (von Meyenburg Complexes):
    • Small, multiple, often incidental.
    • Can mimic metastases but are stable. Imaging of simple hepatic cyst and biliary hamartomaoka

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Hemangiomas: Most common benign liver tumor; typically asymptomatic, observe. Biopsy contraindicated due to bleeding.
  • FNH: Second most common; characteristic central stellate scar on imaging. No malignant potential.
  • Hepatic Adenoma: Strong association with OCPs; risk of rupture & malignancy if >5 cm.
  • Amoebic Liver Abscess: E. histolytica; anchovy sauce pus, right lobe common; treat with metronidazole.
  • Hydatid Cyst: Echinococcus; daughter cysts, calcification; anaphylaxis risk on rupture; albendazole + intervention.
  • Pyogenic Liver Abscess: Often polymicrobial; fever, RUQ pain; requires antibiotics and drainage.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE