CASE 1077 Published on 04.07.2001

Caroli's disease

Section

Abdominal imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

S. Cakirer

Patient

19 years, female

Categories
No Area of Interest ; Imaging Technique MR, MR, MR
Clinical History
A 19-year-old female patient who had recurrent cramplike right upper quadrant pains more than three years referred with severe abdominal pain, fever and mild jaundice, biochemical analysis revealed high levels of serum alkaline phosphatase, gammaglutamyltransferase, and mildly elevated levels of serum SGOT and SGPT enzymes.
Imaging Findings
A 19-year-old female patient who had recurrent cramplike right upper quadrant pains more than three years referred with severe abdominal pain, fever and mild jaundice, biochemical analysis revealed high levels of serum alkaline phosphatase, gammaglutamyltransferase, and mildly elevated levels of serum SGOT and SGPT enzymes. MRI study of the abdomen with SE T1, FSE T2 weighted sequences on three planes, and MRCP (MR cholangiopancreatography) study by maximum intensity projection reconstruction of heavily FSE T2 weighted coronal images (TR/TE: 18762/240 msec) were performed on a 1.5 T MR scanner. MR pictures revealed multiple hepatic cystic dilatations communicating with the biliary tree, bile sludge causing fluid-fluid levels and bile calculi. Extrahepatic bile tracts and main biliarl duct were not much dilated as intrahepatic bile tracts.
Discussion
Caroli's disease, also called communicating cavernous ectasia of intrahepatic ducts, is a rare congenital abnormality characterized by multifocal segmental dilatation of the intrahepatic bile ducts. Caroli's disease appears to be autosomal recessively inherited in most cases. Perinatal hepatic arterial occlusion or hypoplasia -aplasia of fibromuscular wall components, causing dilatation of primitive biliary ducts may play role in development of Caroli's disease. It is most commonly seen in childhood and second to third decades of life. Males and females are equally affected. There are two forms of the disease, one associated with congenital hepatic fibrosis (type II) and the other form occurring alone (pure form, type I). Although classically known that type II is much more common than type I form, the recent reports suggest that the pure form may be as common as that with congenital hepatic fibrosis. Pure form is characterized by segmental, saccular, communicating intrahepatic bile duct ectasia involving a single segment or lobe of the liver or the whole liver. Bile duct dilatation is less prominent in type II. Clinical findings of type I disease are recurrent cramplike abdominal pains, fever, jaundice; clinical findings of type II disease are related to portal hypertension developing secondary to hepatic fibrosis. Medullary sponge kidney (in 80 %), infantile polycystic kidney disease, renal tubular ectasia, and rarely choledochal cyst are the conditions associated with Caroli's disease. Multiple cystic structures that converge toward the porta hepatis as either localized or diffusely scattered cysts communicating with bile ducts is the essential diagnostic feature of Caroli's disease in medical imaging studies (ultrasonography, computed tomography, MRI). Other imaging findings can be listed as segmental saccular or beaded appearance of intrahepatic bile ducts extending toward the periphery of the liver; fibrovascular bundles containing a portal vein radicle and a small branch of hepatic artery completely surrounded by dilated intrahepatic bile ducts (central dot sign on computed tomography); bridge formation across dilated lumina; frequent ectasia of extrahepatic ducts and common bile duct; sludge or calculi in dilated ducts. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) is a noninvasive technique alternative to invasive imaging techniques (endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography and percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography) to evaluate biliary tree. The MRCP images are obtained from three-dimensional maximum intensity projection reconstructions of heavily T2-weighted fast spin-echo sequences. The maximum intensity projection reconstruction allows rotation of the images in the coronal plane with demonstration of continuity beetwen hepatic cystic dilatations and the biliary tree in Caroli's disease as the most important diagnostic finding. Differential diagnosis of Caroli's disease is not difficult from polycystic liver disease, multiple hepatic abscesses, and other more unusual malformations by the characteristic imaging findings of the disease. Complications of the disease are bile stasis with recurrent cholangitis, biliary calculi, hepatic abscess, septicemia, and increased risk of cholangiocarcinoma in approximately 7 % of the cases. The treatment depends on the clinical features and the location of the biliary abnormality. When the disease is localized to one hepatic lobe, lobectomy relieves symptoms and appears to remove the risk of malignancy. In diffuse Caroli's disease, treatment options include conservative or endoscopic therapy, internal biliary bypass procedures and liver transplantation in carefully selected cases.
Differential Diagnosis List
Caroli's disease
Final Diagnosis
Caroli's disease
Case information
URL: https://eurorad.org/case/1077
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.1077
ISSN: 1563-4086