Are intrahepatic calcified foci stable

Intrahepatic calcification is usually a stable lesion, if it is a simple calcification, most patients do not have typical clinical symptoms and have no special clinical significance; if it is a stable calcified lesion after recovery from liver disease, local tissue fibrosis is also formed; ultrasound or CT examination can suggest that the calcified lesion has a high-density shadow similar to that of a stone. There are many reasons for the formation of calcified foci, mainly including intrahepatic inflammatory injury, liver injury, intrahepatic stones, intrahepatic parasitic infection, intrahepatic metastases, and benign liver masses or liver malignant tumors. Calcified foci in the liver are mainly distinguished from primary or secondary tumors of the liver, and liver infection and inflammation, etc. Only when the cause of the disease is clear, can targeted treatment be taken; Necrosis of some liver cells is a normal phenomenon, and the appearance of calcified spots is mainly due to the necrosis of cells, due to the obstacle of blood circulation in the liver, resulting in the deposition of necrotic cells in the liver; in general, it does not have a great impact on the body, and there is no need to do treatment. For patients with symptoms of intrahepatic calcification, it is recommended that they go to the hospital in time to improve the examination and clarify the cause of the disease, and then give targeted treatment or therapy.