An enlarging heterogeneous hypodense mass in the right hepatic lobe may indicate a liver tumor. Further imaging studies and possibly a biopsy would be needed to determine the nature of this mass. Treatment options would depend on the type of tumor and the extent of its spread.
Gastric Artery - esophageal branch and hepatic Common Hepatic Artery - Proper hepatic artery, Right Gastric artery and Gastroduodenal artery Splenic Artery - Dorsal pancreatic, short gastric and Left Gastro-omental
The transverse colon is the part of the large intestine that is located between the hepatic flexure (right colic flexure) and the splenic flexure (left colic flexure). It runs horizontally across the abdomen from right to left below the stomach and liver.
Hypodensity of the right hepatic lobe typically represents a region in the liver where the tissue is less dense than surrounding areas on imaging. This can be indicative of various conditions such as fatty liver disease, metastasis, or inflammation. Further evaluation, such as additional imaging or laboratory tests, may be needed to determine the underlying cause.
Food in the intestine is almost liquid form. Most of the water is absorbed back in the large intestine. That makes you to have the well formed stool. This absorbed water enters the portal venous system. Then it goes to the liver. From the liver it goes to the hepatic vein. Hepatic vein joins the inferior vena cava. From there it enters the right atrium of the heart.
Blood is pumped from the heart through the arteries to the legs, supplying oxygen and nutrients to the tissues. The blood then returns to the heart through the veins to be reoxygenated. This process is facilitated by the contraction of leg muscles, which helps push the blood back towards the heart.
what is afocal hypodense area in the right hippocology region
The hepatic flexure lies in the upper right quadrant of the abdomen.
The two ducts that exit the liver and join to form the common hepatic duct are called?
The right and left hepatic veins.
The right and left hepatic veins.
hi i saw the answer for this Q in this site http://anatomy.med.umich.edu/gastrointestinal_system/stomach_ans.html (right gastro-omental artery: a branch of the gastroduodenal artery, which is a branch of the common hepatic artery, which is a primary branch of the celiac trunk )
The hepatic artery and many of its branches lie on the right side only.
Spleen, Splenic vein, hepatic portal vein, LIVER, hepatic sinusoids, hepatic veins, inferior vena cava, HEART (right atrium, tricuspic valve, right ventricle, semilunar or pulmonary valve, pulmonary arteries, lungs, pulmonary veins, left atrium, bicuspid or mitral valve, left ventricle, semilunar/aortic valve, aorta, brachiocephalic artery, right subclavian artery, right axillary artery, right brachial artery, then either right ulnar or radial artery to the hand
A hypodense lesion is one that is darker than the surrounding tissue on ultrasound. The clinical significance, if any, will be determined by considering your radiology findings in conjunction with the history and physical.
A hypodense area simply means the area is "less dense" than surrounding structures. This can be a cyst or any number of things.
Gastric Artery - esophageal branch and hepatic Common Hepatic Artery - Proper hepatic artery, Right Gastric artery and Gastroduodenal artery Splenic Artery - Dorsal pancreatic, short gastric and Left Gastro-omental
Caudate lobe drains into Left and Right Hepatic ducts; don't get confused with the Quadrate lobe of the liver which drains only into the Left hepatic duct.