National Institute for Environmental Studies, Onogawa, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.
The Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rat, an animal
model of Wilson's disease, abnormally accumulates copper in the liver.
There have been a lot of reports on preneoplastic and neoplastic hepatic
tumors in LEC rats, but few studies have been focused on other lesions.
The aim of this study was to describe the MR findings of the liver of LEC
rats with pathologic correlation to characterize the hepatic lesions developed
in them. We measured MR images of the liver of six aged (over the age of
70 weeks old) male LEC rats. Measurements of T(1), T(2)-weighted images,
and the dynamic and delayed studies after i.v. gadolinium injection were
performed. The rats were sacrificed immediately after the measurements,
and the diagnosis was histologically made. We identified seven lesions
of peliosis hepatis, three neoplastic/dysplastic lesions, three cysts and
one cholangiofibrosis. Peliosis hepatis was characterized as showing a
significantly long T(2) relaxation time of 57.9 +/- 13.3 ms (mean +/- standard
deviation) compared with 41.3 +/- 1.7 ms in normal liver, and prolonged
enhancement after a gadolinium injection. Neoplastic/dysplastic lesions
tended to show prolonged T(2), and they showed isointensity on T(1)-weighted
images. They were best characterized by early enhancement followed by a
rapid wash-out after a gadolinium injection. In conclusions, the frequent
occurrence of peliosis hepatis observed in the present study suggests this
can be a characteristic lesion in aged LEC rats. The characteristic MR
findings enable us to distinguish between peliosis hepatis and neoplastic/dysplastic
lesions.
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