Small intrahepatic calcified foci are usually recommended to be followed up and observed.
Small intrahepatic calcified foci are confined lesions left behind by the deposition of calcium salts in localized tissues. Intrahepatic calcified foci are mostly scarring of the liver parenchymal cells after an inflammatory reaction and do not require treatment. Note that this is a small localized calcified foci, not diffuse. Calcified foci alone have no effect on the body and do not require treatment.
Calcified foci in the liver should be distinguished from intrahepatic choledocholithiasis. If abdominal ultrasound, CT, and other imaging tests show multiple calcified foci in the liver and concentrated in the intrahepatic bile ducts, it may be a choledocholithiasis, and further tests are needed to make a definitive diagnosis.
If you find that the small calcified foci in the liver continue to grow rapidly or have physical discomfort, please consult a doctor promptly to avoid delaying your condition.