Radiology Case Reports (May 2021)

Giant esophageal hemangioma diagnosed by 99mTc-HSA-D scintigraphy following equivocal CT, MRI, and endoscopy

  • Elly Arizono, MD,
  • Yu Tajima, MD, PhD,
  • Mana Yoshimura, MD, PhD,
  • Kazuhiro Saito, MD, PhD,
  • Takao Itoi, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 5
pp. 1023 – 1027

Abstract

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Mediastinal cavernous hemangioma is a rare lesion requiring diagnosis without invasive procedure due to the risk of hemorrhage, which can be massive and even fatal. Here we describe the successful diagnosis of such a lesion using technetium-99m diethylenetriamine penta-acetic acid human serum albumin (99mTc-HSA-D) scintigraphy. A 36-year-old female with a 3-week back pain underwent endoscopic ultrasonography, contrast-enhanced CT, and MRI dynamic study which together revealed a submucosal tumor of the esophagus; likely to be either hemangioma or lymphangioma. Because of poor or no enhancement, it was impossible to distinguish the nature of the lesion. However, using delayed blood-pool imaging of 99mTc-HSA-D (at 40 minutes postinjection), and the characteristic accumulation, the tumor was clearly identifiable as an esophageal hemangioma. This case shows 99mTc-HSA-D scintigraphy to be an effective noninvasive imaging method to capture the characteristic hemodynamics of hemangioma.

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