Alcoholic liver disease CT
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: M. Khurram Afzal, MD [2]
Overview
Overview
Abdominal CT scan may be helpful in the diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease. Findings on CT scan suggestive of hepatic steatosis and cirrhosis may be seen.
CT scan
CT scan
- Findings on CT scan suggestive of alcoholic liver disease include:
- Non-contrast CT scan for detecting hepatic steatosis:[1][2]
- Macroscopic fat in the liver
- Liver to spleen attenuation ratio greater than ten hounsfield units indicates hepatic steatosis
- Cirrhosis:[3]
- Atrophy of the right lobe of the liver
- Hypertrophy of the caudate lobe of the liver
- Hypertrophy of the lateral segment of the left lobe
- Parenchymal nodularity
- Attenuation of hepatic vasculature
- Splenomegaly
- Venous collaterals
- Ascites
- Non-contrast CT scan for detecting hepatic steatosis:[1][2]
- CT of a cirrhotic patient shows a liver with a shrunken, nodular appearance.

Source: Wikimedia commons [4]
References
References
- ↑ Soliman R, Saad MA, Refai M (1985). “Studies on histoplasmosis farciminosii (epizootic lymphangitis) in Egypt. III. Application of a skin test (‘Histofarcin’) in the diagnosis of epizootic lymphangitis in horses”. Mykosen. 28 (9): 457–61. PMID 4058482.
- ↑ Piekarski J, Goldberg HI, Royal SA, Axel L, Moss AA (1980). “Difference between liver and spleen CT numbers in the normal adult: its usefulness in predicting the presence of diffuse liver disease”. Radiology. 137 (3): 727–9. doi:10.1148/radiology.137.3.6934563. PMID 6934563.
- ↑ Rofsky NM, Fleishaker H (1995). “CT and MRI of diffuse liver disease”. Semin. Ultrasound CT MR. 16 (1): 16–33. PMID 7718279.
- ↑ “File:Morbus-Osler-CT-Leber-ax-012.jpg – Wikimedia Commons”. External link in
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