Giant hemangiomas of the liver: Surgical strategies and technical aspects

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Abstract

The incidence of hemangiomas is 2 - 7% in the general population. We evaluated more than 300 patients with hepatic hemangiomas. Surgical removal of hepatic hemangiomas was performed in 48 cases due to uncertain diagnosis (2 cases), intractable symptoms (26 cases), size increase (18 cases), and liver failure in 2 cases that were treated by hepatic transplantation. In all, 26 patients underwent enucleation of hemangiomas or segmentectomies, while the remaining 20 patients underwent right lobectomies or left lateral segmentectomies. Blood transfusions were required in four cases (including two liver transplants); mean post-resection hospital stay was 6.3 days. We observed no perioperative mortality and only two cases of major morbidity (bile leaks not requiring reoperation). Our experience confirms that, after adequate patient selection, surgical treatment of hepatic hemangiomas is a very effective therapeutic choice with no mortality and low morbidity. © 2006 Taylor & Francis.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Berloco, P., Bruzzone, P., Mennini, G., Della Pietra, F., Iappelli, M., Novelli, G., & Rossi, M. (2006). Giant hemangiomas of the liver: Surgical strategies and technical aspects. HPB, 8(3), 200–201. https://doi.org/10.1080/13651820500539610

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