enlarged lymph nodes (portahepatis)may be due to:-
1)inflammatory due to chronic cholicystitis.
2)neoplastic (abdominal lymphoma)
3)as a metastasis due to adenocarcinoma of the stomach.
Hepatic vein
Visceral surface of the liver where the portal vein & hepatic vein meet
A lymph node.
The porta hepatis is not considered a true hilum because it is not a depression or an opening like other hila in the body. Instead, it is a region on the liver where structures like the hepatic artery, portal vein, and bile duct enter and exit the liver.
A reactive lymph node is the same as an enlarged lymph node. Lymph nodes can become enlarged for a variety of reasons, most of which aren't serious. The ICD code for a reactive lymph node is 785.6.
A paraaortic prominent lymph node is a lymph node more noticable than the others and found near the aorta.
The difference between incision and excision of lymph nodes is very simple. The incision of a lymph node is when the biopsy only takes part of the lymph node during surgery. The excision of the lymph node is when the whole lymph node is removed.
possibly an swollen lymph node possibly an swollen lymph node
A sentinel lymph node is the first lymph node that drains a cancer. If a cancer has not spread to the first draining lymph node near a cancer, there is a high likelihood it has not spread elsewhere.
It's a lymph node that drains an inflamed area. The source of the inflammation can be bacterial-viral infection, immunological disease, or malignancy.
A sentinel lymph node is the first lymph node that drains a cancer. If a cancer has not spread to the first draining lymph node near a cancer, there is a high likelihood it has not spread elsewhere.
lymph/o