4.5 Article

Sonography of diffuse liver disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 9, Pages 1023-1032

Publisher

AMER INST ULTRASOUND MEDICINE
DOI: 10.7863/jum.2002.21.9.1023

Keywords

hepatocellular carcinoma; portal hypertension; transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent shunts; venous clot

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Sonography is often the first imaging procedure performed in the evaluation of individuals with suspected liver disease. Evaluation for biliary dilatation is always per-formed, because bile duct obstruction can cause abnormal liver test results, raising the suspicion of liver disease. Ultrasound is a useful but imperfect tool in evaluating diffuse liver disease. We discuss the uses and limitations of sonography in evaluating parenchymal liver disease, Sonography can show hepatomegaly, fatty infiltration of the liver, and cirrhosis, all with good but imperfect sensitivity and specificity. Sonography is of limited usefulness in acute hepatitis. Increased parenchymal echogenicity is a reliable criterion for diagnosing fatty liver. Cirrhosis can be diagnosed in the correct clinical setting when the following are present: a nodular liver surface, decreased right lobe-caudate lobe ratio, and indirect evidence of portal hypertension (collateral vessels and splenomegaly). Ultrasound plays an important role in the imaging of conditions and procedures common in patients with diffuse liver disease.

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