Purpose: To assess whether triphasic spiral CT enables characterization of a wide range of focal liver lesions.

Materials And Methods: One hundred five patients with suspected focal liver disease underwent triphasic liver CT. After injection of contrast material, the liver was scanned in arterial (scanning delay, 22-27 seconds), portal (scanning delay, 49-73 seconds), and equilibrium (scanning delay, 8-10 minutes) phases. Enhancement of each lesion in each phase was evaluated, and the lesions were tabulated according to one of 11 enhancement patterns.

Results: In 94 patients, 375 liver lesions were detected. The nature of the lesion was confirmed in 326 lesions (87%). Six of 11 enhancement patterns were always due to benign disease and caused by areas with hyper- or hypoperfusion, hemangiomas, cysts, focal nodular hyperplasias, or benign but nonspecified lesions. Two of 11 patterns were always due to malignant disease, and one pattern was due to malignant disease in 38 (97%) of 39 patients with known malignancy elsewhere or with chronic liver disease. The other two patterns were seen in metastases and partly fibrosed hemangiomas.

Conclusion: Triphasic liver CT enables characterization of a wide range of focal liver lesions, including the benign liver lesions that occur most frequently.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiology.201.2.8888219DOI Listing

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