Sobhonslidsuk Abhasnee, Jeffers Lennox J, Acosta Rita C, Madariaga Juan R, Bejarano Pablo A, Guerra Jorge J, Tzakis Andreas G, Schiff Eugene R
Center For Liver Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, USA.
J Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2005 Apr;20(4):653-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1746.2005.03822.x.
Hepatic adenoma is a benign tumor characterized by its hypervascularity. Hepatic adenoma tends to occur more frequently in women and is related to the use of contraceptive hormones, androgenic/anabolic steroids, pregnancy, glycogen storage diseases and hemochromatosis. Hepatic venous obstruction, or Budd-Chiari syndrome, is a condition of hepatic vein occlusion that has many causes. A 35-year-old woman presented shortly after pregnancy with a huge cystic lesion in the liver. The lesion compressed the hepatic vein and created an early stage of Budd-Chiari syndrome. Tumor resection was carried out successfully. The final diagnosis of this case was multiple hepatic adenomas.