Supradiaphragmatic ectopic liver
Savas Deftereos, Maria Kalbazidou
Corresponding author: Savas Deftereos, Radiology Department, Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece
Received: 09 Feb 2022 - Accepted: 15 Feb 2022 - Published: 21 Feb 2022
Domain: Radiology,Gastroenterology,Internal medicine
Keywords: Supradiaphragmatic ectopic liver, hemidiaphragmatic eventration, Computed Tomography
©Savas Deftereos et al. Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Savas Deftereos et al. Supradiaphragmatic ectopic liver. Pan African Medical Journal. 2022;41:152. [doi: 10.11604/pamj.2022.41.152.33696]
Available online at: https://www.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/article/41/152/full
Supradiaphragmatic ectopic liver
&Corresponding author
An 81-year-old man was referred to our hospital for unexplained weight loss (more than 7 kilograms in last 6 months). The complete blood count shows evidence of anaemia. The findings of clinical examination were unremarkable and no other comorbidities or coexisting symptoms was referred. His past medical history includes arterial hypertension. The findings from the Contrast Enhanced Computed Tomography of the abdomen depicted a 2.7cm multi-chambered liver cyst compatible with echinococcal cyst, cholelithiasis without signs of inflammation, diverticulosis and no obvious reason for weight-loss. However, a lobulated right subdiaphragmatic liver surface (huge hump like) was noticed. The referred areas high was 6,2cm and the base was 6.7cm. The hump appeared to be continuous with the right hepatic lobe via a wide surface and had similar architecture and vessel continuity with the liver. Supradiaphragmatic ectopic and in generally the occurrence of ectopic liver tissue is rare (incidence: <0.5%). In this anatomical variant, liver tissue extends into the right hemithorax through an opening in the right hemidiaphragm. This differs from a transdiaphragmatic congenital herniation of the liver, in that no apparent defect depicted in the diaphragmatic complex besides the normal hiatus. Furthermore, patient must not have a history of trauma, otherwise traumatic liver herniation through a diaphragmatic tear must be more likely. It is important for radiologists to consider supradiaphragmatic ectopic liver as a differential diagnosis when facing intrathoracic mass in continuation with right hemidiaphragm and/or right hemidiaphragmatic eventration. The figure actually includes: contrast enhanced compute tomography: a) Multiplanar reconstruction showing the supradiaphragmatic ectopic liver and its vascularity (arrow). Star: echinococcal cyst; b) axial view: showing a mildly enhancing well circumscribed, soft tissue mass in the right hemithorax.
Figure 1: contrast enhanced compute tomography: a) multiplanar reconstruction showing the supradiaphragmatic ectopic liver and its vascularity (arrow). Star: echinococcal cyst; b) axial view: showing a mildly enhancing well circumscribed, soft tissue mass in the right hemithorax