Radiology Case Reports (Jun 2020)

Hepatic adenoma rupture following portal vein embolization

  • Lilla E. Kis, BS,
  • Barbara A. Centeno, MD,
  • Daniel A. Anaya, MD,
  • Bela Kis, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
pp. 664 – 667

Abstract

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Hepatic adenomas are benign liver tumors typically found in females of reproductive age. Though benign, hepatic adenomas are highly vascularized tumors, thus rupture and consequent hemorrhage present a feared complication. We report a case of a 31-year-old woman with hepatic adenoma who underwent preoperative portal vein embolization and subsequently suffered a rupture of her tumor. We postulate that the change in blood flow after portal vein embolization, a phenomenon known as the hepatic artery buffer response, may have contributed to the tumor rupture, though the possibility that the rupture was purely incidental remains. There is currently no prior report of such rupture occurring following portal vein embolization, and this case brings to light a potentially fatal complication of a generally safely regarded procedure in patients with hepatic adenoma.

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