Ultrasound is usually the first diagnostic imaging test done due to its availability. Liver hemangiomas appear as a well-defined, hyperechoic mass with posterior acoustic enhancement. Color-Doppler US has not shown to improve diagnostic accuracy. Liver biopsy is generally avoided if imaging is inconclusive. Liver hemangiomas tend to be vascular in nature, and so there is an increased risk of bleeding with biopsy. Hepatic hemangiomas can occur as part of a clinical syndrome, for example
Klippel–Trénaunay syndrome,
Osler–Weber–Rendu syndrome and
Von Hippel–Lindau syndrome.
Types • Typical hepatic hemangioma • Atypical hepatic hemangioma • Giant hepatic hemangioma • Flash filling hepatic hemangioma – can account for up to 16% of all hepatic hemangiomas • Calcified hepatic hemangioma • Hyalinized hepatic hemangioma • Other unusual imaging patterns • Hepatic hemangioma with capsular retraction • Hepatic hemangioma with surrounding regional nodular hyperplasia • Hepatic hemangioma with fatty infiltration • Pedunculated hepatic hemangioma • Cystic hepatic hemangioma – rare • Fluid-fluid level containing hepatic hemangioma – rare
Giant hepatic hemangioma This large, atypical hemangioma of the liver may present with abdominal pain or fullness due to hemorrhage,
thrombosis or
mass effect. It may also lead to
left ventricular volume overload and
heart failure due to the increase in
cardiac output which it causes. Further complications are
Kasabach–Merritt syndrome, a form of
consumptive coagulopathy due to
thrombocytopaenia, and rupture. == Imaging follow-up ==