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First published online April 26, 2006
British Journal of Radiology (2006) 79, 659-665
© 2006 British Institute of Radiology
doi: 10.1259/bjr/12699987

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Full paper

Imaging well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma with dynamic triple-phase helical computed tomography

C-S Li1,3, R-C Chen1,3,4, H-Y Tu1, L-S Shih2, T-A Zhang2, J-M Lii1, W-T Chen1, S-J Duh1 and L-C Chiang1

Departments of 1Radiology 2Pathology, Renai Branch, Taipei City Hospital, Taipei 3Department of Radiology, School of Medicine, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei and 4Department of Radiology, School of Medicine, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan

To investigate the imaging appearance of well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) on dynamic CT, a total of 38 histopathologically proven well-differentiated HCC were included in a retrospective study. We reviewed the contrast-enhanced dynamic CT of all 38 tumours for attenuation of each tumour in unenhanced scan, arterial-dominant and delayed portal venous phases. Our results showed that dynamic CT identified 26 (68.4%) out of the 38 lesions. The remaining 12 lesions were isodense compared with surrounding liver parenchyma in each dynamic CT phase. There was no statistically significant difference between the mean size of tumours detected by dynamic CT and that of tumours not detected by dynamic CT (p = 0.1). Of a total of 38 tumours, most were isodense (n = 19) or hypodense (n = 16) in unenhanced scan, mostly hyperdense (n = 18) or isodense (n = 15) in arterial-dominant phase and mostly isodense (n = 22) or hypodense (n = 15) in delayed portal venous phase. Enhancement of tumour was observed in 19 (50.0%) of 38 lesions. In conclusion, the ability of dynamic CT to detect well-differentiated HCC is poor, and negative CT findings cannot exclude the presence of well-differentiated HCC, especially if there is well-grounded clinical suspicion for HCC.




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