Bruno’s Wig
New member
- Oct 18, 2017
- 5
If you have the money, it might be worthwhile seeing a nutritionist who could advise you about food and supplements. .
Rest assured if there was any concern at all, you’d be having further tests and not have been discharged. Just some knotty blood vessels that may even resolve on their own. MRIs and CT scans pick up all sorts of lumps and bumps now simply because the tests have become more available - they are mostly very common benign issues. Problem is, the people prone to anxiety about their health go over these reports looking for anything that is out of the ordinary - they then get anxious because the report is thorough enough to detail absolutely everything.MRI result back quite quickly. My GP has updated my NHS app with “acceptable - no action”, so I guess I won’t expect a phone call from them. The notes from the report say:
“Within the anterior aspect of segment five is a well-defined high signal T2 lesion measuring 25 by 24 mm. The appearances are consistent with a small haemangioma with no concerning features. No other significant findings. Conclusion: Segment 5 hepatic haemangioma of no concern.”
After a little googling this seems to be a not uncommon (about 1 in 20) small lesion which is not cancerous and should have no impact on my health.
Anyone else found of one these or can shed any further light? Thanks!
Great post, appreciated.Rest assured if there was any concern at all, you’d be having further tests and not have been discharged. Just some knotty blood vessels that may even resolve on their own. MRIs and CT scans pick up all sorts of lumps and bumps now simply because the tests have become more available - they are mostly very common benign issues. Problem is, the people prone to anxiety about their health go over these reports looking for anything that is out of the ordinary - they then get anxious because the report is thorough enough to detail absolutely everything.
Sometimes, but not often, these scans do actually pick up something early which can be a live saver because you then get put into monitoring and review instead of discharge - you would know at the time though because the Consultant phones or makes a follow up appt. When I had my first MRI for the liver last July, it showed NAFLD but coincidentally also a tiny tumour in a side branch in my pancreas that never would have been found because it’s too early to have symptoms (and too small to biopsy safely) - I had another follow up MRI in January and one a few weeks ago to check the growth. Given pancreatic cancer has no symptoms until late stage (hence the poor survival rate) that could be a significant finding (I’m not at all worried as it’s being monitored now every 12 months) - If I had never had any scans for symptomatic drug-induced liver damage, I never would have known about the Pancreas.
The NAFD can be controlled by diet (if it is diet related) - I developed mine after drug toxicity (high doses of intravenous antibiotics) damaged my liver.
I would probably raise the idea of having 6 monthly or annual liver functions tests with the GP though - these will be the first sign that your liver isn’t functioning properly.
Otherwise lots of low fat, non-processed food with plenty of fruit and veg for the NAFLD.
All good, but biopsy is still the gold standard. From a recent publication, https://bmcmedimaging.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12880-022-00821-6:Rest assured if there was any concern at all, you’d be having further tests and not have been discharged. Just some knotty blood vessels that may even resolve on their own. MRIs and CT scans pick up all sorts of lumps and bumps now simply because the tests have become more available - they are mostly very common benign issues. Problem is, the people prone to anxiety about their health go over these reports looking for anything that is out of the ordinary - they then get anxious because the report is thorough enough to detail absolutely everything.
Sometimes, but not often, these scans do actually pick up something early which can be a live saver because you then get put into monitoring and review instead of discharge - you would know at the time though because the Consultant phones or makes a follow up appt. When I had my first MRI for the liver last July, it showed NAFLD but coincidentally also a tiny tumour in a side branch in my pancreas that never would have been found because it’s too early to have symptoms (and too small to biopsy safely) - I had another follow up MRI in January and one a few weeks ago to check the growth. Given pancreatic cancer has no symptoms until late stage (hence the poor survival rate) that could be a significant finding (I’m not at all worried as it’s being monitored now every 12 months) - If I had never had any scans for symptomatic drug-induced liver damage, I never would have known about the Pancreas.
The NAFLD can be controlled by diet (if it is diet related) - I developed mine after drug toxicity (high doses of intravenous antibiotics) damaged my liver.
I would probably raise the idea of having 6 monthly or annual liver functions tests with the GP though - these will be the first sign that your liver isn’t functioning properly.
Otherwise lots of low fat, non-processed food with plenty of fruit and veg for the NAFLD.
All good, but biopsy is still the gold standard. From a recent publication, https://bmcmedimaging.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12880-022-00821-6:
"For hepatic PDFF measurement without liver puncture biopsy as the gold standard, and for general hepatic PDFF assessment, 9L-ROI sampling strategy at the whole-liver level should be used preferentially. For hepatic PDFF with liver puncture biopsy as the gold standard, 3L-ROI sampling strategy at the puncture site segment is recommended."
MRI still isn't that good at determining level of NAFLD (of which there are many scales) "The PDFF correlated with the steatosis grade determined by biopsy in these patients; PDFF increased with increasing histology-determined steatosis score. Steatosis was nonlinearly associated with fibrosis, as determined by both PDFF and biopsy. Thus, a low level of steatosis does not necessarily mean that the patient has mild NAFLD." from Permutt, Z. et al. Correlation between liver histology and novel magnetic resonance imaging in adult patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease—MRI accurately quantifies hepatic steatosis in NAFLD. Aliment. Pharmacol. Ther. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2036.2012.05121.x
I'll PM you a link to my colleague's work, as his bio says: Ranked World Expert and 5th in the world by Expertscape for research in NAFLD (2010-2022) (2022), if you are inetersted. We did quite a lot of work together but he's much, much more knowledgeable than me.
You misunderstood my post I think and you misunderstand the current research and causing unnecessary worry.
DittoThis is my neurodeviance,….I shouldn't post late at night