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Three cases of giant liver haemangioma were revealed by fever and biological inflammatory changes, which disappeared after resection of the haemangioma. These rare symptoms accompanying liver haemangioma may lead to misdiagnosis. Resection whenever possible results in the disappearance of symptoms.
Hepatic hemangioma is mostly asymptomatic and incidental finding on imaging. Fever of unknown origin as a sole presentation is rare. We present an interesting case report of a 49-year-old female, who presented with fever for three months. Extensive blood investigations and infectious workup failed
A 37 year-old-woman was admitted to the hospital because of 15 days' duration of continuous fever. Routine studies for detection of fever foci were negative. Imaging studies revealed giant hemangioma of the liver with central thrombosis. The fever persisted for a period of 4 weeks, and subsided
In conclusion, we report the cases of two patients with large hemangiomas of the liver, abdominal pain, increased ESR and fibrinogen, increased serum alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyltransferase activity, and normal white blood cell counts. Clinical and biochemical abnormalities disappeared
A 47-year-old man presented with fever of unknown origin, generalized weakness, edema, and renal failure. He had left-sided pleural effusion, generalized lymphadenopathy, multiple nontender cutaneous nodules, hepatomegaly, renal failure, and hypergammaglobulinemia. Axillary lymph node biopsy showed
Objective: To investigate the clinical features and surgical treatment effect of patients with cardiac cavernous hemangioma. Methods: Clinical data of 9 patients (5 male, aged from 4 to 53 years old) with cardiac cavernous hemangioma, who underwent surgical treatment from November 2002 to March 2015
A rare case of epithelioid hemangioma (angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia) arising in the right temporal artery of a 68-year-old Japanese woman was investigated. The patient had been treated with corticosteroids (Predonine 5 mg/day p.o.) for 4 years for idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura.
As many as 10% to 20% of patients with disseminated hemangiomas involving vital organs fail to respond to conventional treatment with steroids, radiotherapy, laser or cyclophosphamide. For the last years, interferon-alpha-2 has been successfully used to treat complicated giant hemangiomas, because
A case of symptomatic giant hemangioma of the liver with fever, anemia, and increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate is reported. Spontaneous hyperdense areas at CT, and high signal-intensity areas at T1-weighted MR images were demonstrated within the hemangioma. Marked hemorrhagic zones