Imaging manifestations of hepatic hemangiosarcoma

The imaging manifestations of hepatic hemangiosarcoma vary in CT, MRI plain scan and enhanced scan. The specific diagnosis should be judged after comprehensive examination. 1. CT, MRI scanning: hepatic hemangiosarcoma shows uneven low-density shadow on CT, and no calcification shadow can be seen in the lesion; MRI shows mixed signal shadow, with low signal on T1WI, high and low mixed signals on T2WI, and high signal shadow at the periphery of the lesion on DWI. 2. Enhancement: all lesions are blood-rich lesions, with mild to moderate progressive enhancement on dynamic enhancement. Depending on the type of lesion, the imaging performance is slightly different. For example, in single mass type, the enhanced density or signal is higher than the surrounding liver parenchyma, but lower than the same layer of abdominal aorta. If the imaging manifestation of hepatic hemangiosarcoma occurs, one should go to the hospital in time for relevant examinations to clarify the extent of the disease and actively cooperate with the doctor’s treatment. Patients with hepatic hemangiosarcoma can reduce the adverse effects of the disease through “early detection, early diagnosis, early treatment”.