Reversibility of Pulmonary Telangiectasia in Liver Cirrhosis Evidenced by Serial Dynamic Pulmonary Perfusion Imaging

Abstract
Pulmonary perfusion imaging with Tc-99m MMA revealed significant uptake in the lungs, brain, spleen, and both kidneys of a 48-year-old woman with liver cirrhosis and pulmonary telangiectasia associated with marked hypoxemia and cyanosis. Dynamic pulmonary perfusion imaging revealed a gradual reduction after peak uptake in both lungs. Several weeks after albumin replacement, the hypoxia and dyspnea disappeared with no change in hepatocellular function. At that time, dynamic pulmonary perfusion imaging revealed a plateau-like time-activity curve of uptake in the lungs, as compared with the findings obtained during the state of severe hypoxemia. These observations suggest that pulmonary teleangiectasia in a patient with liver cirrhosis may be due to functional vasodilatation. Serial dynamic pulmonary perfusion imaging indicates the passage of the MAA particles through the widened lumen of the pulmonary alveolar capillaries.

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