Anastomosing hemangioma of liver

Authors

  • Bryce Allen Merritt
  • Spencer Behr
  • Sarah E Umetsu
  • John Roberts
  • K. Pallav Kolli

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v13i6.3644

Keywords:

Anastomosing hemangioma, Hepatic small vessel neoplasm, Liver, MRI, CT, US

Abstract

Anastomosing hemangiomas are a rare subtype of benign vascular hemangioma which most commonly arise in the genitourinary tract and retroperitoneum. In only a small number of reports has this entity been shown originating within the liver parenchyma. Despite their benign behavior, on contrast-enhanced computer tomography and magnetic resonance imaging studies anastomosing hemangiomas can demonstrate enhancement characteristics similar to primary and metastatic liver lesions. This case report highlights the imaging features of this entity and provides a brief review of the limited literature that exists on this rare hepatic lesion.

Author Biographies

Bryce Allen Merritt

MD, Resident, Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, UCSF

Spencer Behr

MD, Associate Professor, Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, UCSF

Sarah E Umetsu

MD, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Pathololgy, UCSF

John Roberts

MD, Professor, Department of Surgery, UCSF

K. Pallav Kolli

MD, Assistant Professor, Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, UCSF

Published

2019-06-20

Issue

Section

Gastrointestinal Radiology