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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We recently examined the clinicopathological and immunohistochemical features of four cases of primary hepatic carcinoma with sarcomatoid elements. Three of the four patients had associated ordinary
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) and one had a sarcomatoid carcinoma with no apparent elements of
HCC
. The presenting symptoms were high fever and hypochondralgia in three patients, and right hypochondralgia without a high fever in one. The preoperative diagnoses were
liver abscess
in two patients,
HCC
in one, and cholangioma in one. Preoperative imaging showed necrotic change or abscess formation in the tumors. The sarcomatous elements showed a positive reaction to vimentin in three patients, but the ordinary
HCC
cells did not. Macroscopically, the tumors appeared as a single nodule with pericapsular growth. The prognoses of these patients were poor due to the early development of intrahepatic or distal metastases. We conclude that symptoms such as a high fever or hypochondralgia are characteristics of these tumors and that they may be histogenetically derived from a dedifferentiation of
HCC
, although no elements of
HCC
were found in one of our cases.
...
PMID:Unusual liver carcinomas with sarcomatous features: analysis of four cases. 1142 8
In conclusion, pyogenic
liver abscess
in
hepatocellular carcinoma
is unusual. Most of the reported cases occurred after a treatment such as transcatheter arterial embolization or percutaneous ultrasound-guided ethanol injection. Salomonella very rarely causes pyogenic liver abscesses. Only 14 cases have been reported in the English literature since 1911. Salmonella
liver abscess
occurring within a primary neoplasm is even rarer. There were only two such cases described in patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
before. The present case is the third one, but it may be the first case of obvious spontaneous gas-forming
liver abscess
caused by Salmonella within
hepatocellular carcinoma
.
...
PMID:Spontaneous gas-forming liver abscess caused by Salmonella within hepatocellular carcinoma: a case report and review of the literature. 1191 47
A 67-year-old male with jaundice was found to have
hepatocellular carcinoma
in the right hepatic lobe and tumor thrombi in the common hepatic duct. Physicians initially considered the tumor unresectable, and treated the patient with transcatheter arterial infusion chemotherapy and biliary endoprosthesis. The patient developed a
liver abscess
after the second transcatheter arterial infusion, and the physicians consulted our department for another form of therapy. Percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage was performed to relieve revived obstructive jaundice. Cholangiography revealed tumor thrombi extending through the right posterior segmental bile duct into the common hepatic duct. Most biliary branches of the caudate lobe joined with the left lateral posterior segmental branch. Arterial and portal venous branches of the caudate lobe were not involved. Right hepatic lobectomy and extrahepatic bile duct resection were performed 1 year after initial diagnosis. On histologic examination, the epithelium of the right posterior segmental bile duct, which was filled with the tumor thrombi, was not detected. The patient is alive without recurrence 24 months after surgery. Careful investigation of biliary branches of the caudate lobe on cholangiography is essential to determine the necessity of caudate lobectomy in patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
and tumor thrombi filling the right posterior segmental bile duct.
...
PMID:Resection of an icteric type hepatoma with tumor thrombi filling the right posterior bile duct. 1239 65
The majority of patients with primary or metastatic liver tumors are not candidates for resection because of the size, location, or multifocality of their tumors, or because of inadequate hepatic function related to cirrhosis. Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is an evolving technique for treating patients with unresectable primary or metastatic liver cancers. After obtaining the approval of our institutional review board for this study, 12 patients with
HCC
and 6 patients with metastatic liver tumors were treated using the LeVeen RF ablation system at the Department of Surgery of Osaka National Hospital between March 2000 and February 2002. Informed consent was obtained from all patients. Ultrasound-guided RFA was done during open surgery. In 12 patients, RFA was performed during laparotomy, while in 6 patients it was done transdiaphragmatically during thoracotomy. All treated tumors showed complete necrosis on imaging after the completion of RFA. After a median follow-up period of 288 days, the tumor had recurred in 5 out of 18 patients, and the median overall survival rate was 362 days. No deaths or major complications occurred in these 18 patients. Liver function tests (ALT, AST, GGT) that were elevated after RFA returned to baseline in most patients by day 7. In 5 patients who underwent RFA at laparotomy, bile leakage and
liver abscess
developed. There were no cases of bile duct injury or
liver abscess
in the patients receiving transdiaphragmatic RFA. In conclusion, transdiaphragmatic RFA during thoracotomy is a safe, well-tolerated, effective treatment for unresectable hepatic malignancies.
...
PMID:[Transdiaphragmatic radiofrequency ablation of malignant liver tumors]. 1248 43
Radiofrequency (RF)-assisted thermal ablation has been used with increasing frequency for unresectable hepatic tumors. This new approach employs RF energy to coagulate the liver at the hepatic resection line after which hepatic resection is performed with the use of a common scalpel. This procedure was used in three patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
and in five patients with colorectal metastasis to the liver. These eight patients underwent a total of two left bisegmentectomies, three segmentectomies, and seven wedge resections. Mean operative time was 220 minutes. A mean of 78 sessions of RF-assisted ablation were required for these resections. Mean blood loss was 46 ml; no device other than RF ablation was required to obtain hemostasis. None of the patients needed a blood transfusion. Preoperative hemoglobin was 12.8 gm/dl and postoperative hemoglobin was 11.3 gm/dl. There were no perioperative deaths. Postoperative complications occurred in two patients: a
liver abscess
in one and heart failure in the other. The mean hospital stay was 9.4 days. This new approach, integrated with other techniques, reduces blood loss and coagulates the margins of resection during liver surgery. This new technique has two limitations: (1) it cannot be applied near main portal pedicles, and (2) it requires a long operative time. The best indication for this technique is when segmentectomy is required in patients with cirrhosis. Its role in major hepatic resections has yet to be determined. Further progress in the development of thermal ablation techniques and experience gained during the learning curve should help reduce the operative time, thereby improving the safety and efficacy of this procedure.
...
PMID:Radiofrequency-assisted liver resection. 1312 59
From January 1990 to December 2000, 202 patients with clinical evidence of liver disease underwent fine needle aspiration cytology of the liver. Of these, 102 patients were diagnosed as non-neoplastic lesions. These include diffuse parenchymal disease of liver,
liver abscess
, hepatitis, and granulomas. There were 100 patients with malignancies of the liver. Out of the above, 64 were due to metastatic carcinoma, 31 were primary
hepatocellular carcinoma
, 1 hepatoblastoma and in 4 patients the diagnosis of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma was made. By comparing with clinical and biochemical parameters, the diagnostic accuracy of the fine needle aspiration cytology, in this study, was found to be more accurate in malignant nodules of the liver as compared to other pathological lesion. The findings of fine needle aspiration cytology of the liver reported by other authors are discussed and it is concluded that this diagnostic method is a safe, useful and economic procedure with minimum complication and can be routinely done for assisting diagnosis of liver diseases in our clinical set up.
...
PMID:Fine needle aspiration cytology of liver: a study of 202 cases. 1451 82
Metastasis of
hepatocellular carcinoma
occurs at a relatively late stage of the disease. Hematogenous and lymphatic metastases are the most common routes for dissemination of tumor cells.
Hepatocellular carcinoma
also extends into the adjacent portal vein and bile ducts. Since there is no peritoneum between the body of the gallbladder and the liver fossa, gallbladder cancer can easily cross the boundary. Gallbladder invasion of
hepatocellular carcinoma
, however, is quite rare. We report a case of hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma in a non-cirrhotic liver that invaded the gallbladder mimicking the gallbladder carcinoma complicated by cholecystitis and
liver abscess
.
...
PMID:[A case of hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma invading the gallbladder]. 1521 49
This pictorial essay aims to show the clinical mimicry of
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) and its diagnostic difficulty, and to create awareness among clinicians and radiologists of potential diagnostic pitfalls. A selected consecutive series of hepatectomies with proven
HCC
over a three-year period, identifying clinical presentation, blood results and imaging of patients with difficult preoperative diagnosis, was reviewed. The imaging of the focal liver lesions is presented pictorially with pathological correlation. Six patients out of 34 cases of resected
HCC
were diagnosed to have benign (three liver abscesses) and neoplastic (one Klatskin tumour, one colorectal liver metastasis, one gallbladder cancer) conditions. Compared to the rest in the series, all six patients had normal serum alpha fetoprotein levels. On computed tomography, the mosaic appearance of
HCC
mimicked locules of
liver abscess
while
HCC
with pseudocapsule (rim enhancement) was misdiagnosed as unilocular abscess or metastatic lesion. Arterial enhancement on contrast-enhanced triphasic computed tomography was useful in diagnosis of
HCC
. In summary,
HCC
can mimic benign and neoplastic clinical syndromes. The diagnosis of
liver abscess
can delay subsequent diagnosis of
HCC
and potentially complicate the treatment plan. Contrast-enhanced triphasic computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging is useful to resolve difficult diagnosis, especially when the serum alpha fetoprotein level is not raised.
...
PMID:Clinical mimicry of hepatocellular carcinoma: imaging-pathological correlation. 1563 7
Salmonellosis with
liver abscess
in a cirrhotic liver is extremely rare. We report the first case of Salmonellosis with septic shock and
liver abscess
in a diabetic and cirrhotic patient. The image studies of liver initially favored
hepatocellular carcinoma
. But no definite focus of sepsis was found. After close follow-up of the liver space-occupied lesion, ultrasound examination revealed the features of liver abscesses at space-occupied lesion later. Ultrasound-guided liver aspiration proved abscess. The clinical and radiological responses were good after antibiotics treatment.
...
PMID:Salmonellosis with liver abscess mimicking hepatocellular carcinoma in a diabetic and cirrhotic patient: a case report and review of the literature. 1662 55
We report a case of postoperative refractory bile leakage managed successfully by intrahepatic biliary ablation with ethanol. A 75-year-old man diagnosed with
hepatocellular carcinoma
underwent extended posterior segmentectomy including the caudate lobe and a part of the anterior segment. The hepatic tumor attached to the anterior branch of the bile duct was detached carefully and resected. Fluid drained from the liver surface postoperatively contained high concentrations of total bilirubin, at a constant volume of 150 mL per day. On d 32 after surgery, a fistulogram of the drainage tube demonstrated an enhancement of the anterior bile duct. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography demonstrated complete obstruction of the proximal anterior bile duct and no enhancement of the peripheral anterior bile duct. On d 46 after surgery, a retrograde transhepatic biliary drainage (RTBD) tube was inserted into the anterior bile duct under open surgery. However, a contrast study of RTBD taken 7 mo post-surgery revealed that the fistula remained patent despite prolonged conservative management, so we decided to perform ethanol ablation of the isolated bile duct. Four mL pure ethanol was injected into the isolated anterior bile duct for ten minutes, the procedure being repeated five times a week. Following 23 attempts, the volume of bile juice reached less than 10 mL per day. The RTBD was clamped and removed two days later. After RTBD removal, the patient had no complaints or symptoms. Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated atrophy of the ethanol-injected anterior segment without
liver abscess
formation.
...
PMID:Postoperative bile leakage managed successfully by intrahepatic biliary ablation with ethanol. 1673 69
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