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AJR 2004; 182:411-414
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Case Report

Sonography, CT, and MRI of Giant Cavernous Hemangioma of the Kidney: Correlation with Pathologic Findings

Remy W. F. Geenen1, Michael A. den Bakker2, Chris H. Bangma3, Shahid M. Hussain1 and Gabriel P. Krestin1

1 Department of Radiology, Erasmus Medical Center, PO Box 2040, Rotterdam, 3000 CA, The Netherlands.
2 Department of Pathology, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, 3000 CA, The Netherlands.
3 Department of Urology, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, 3000 CA, The Netherlands.

Received January 24, 2003; accepted after revision July 21, 2003.

 
Address correspondence to R. W. F. Geenen (r.geenen{at}erasmusmc.nl).


Introduction
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
Hemangiomas are benign vascular tumors that probably arise from embryonic rests of unipotent angioblastic cells [1]. A distinction is made between capillary and cavernous forms. The kidney is the most commonly affected organ of the urinary tract; 198 cases of renal hemangiomas had been reported as of the early 1990s. Renal hemangiomas usually occur as a single entity, showing no predilection for either sex. The most common sites of occurrence are the pyramids of the kidneys and the renal pelvis. Renal hemangiomas usually measure 1–2 cm, but their size can range from microscopic to larger than 10 cm. The symptoms produced can range from none to gross hematuria and colic due to the passage of blood clots [1]. Renal hemangiomas are benign and extremely rare; in one series in which 17,941 patients were studied, only one renal cavernous hemangioma was found [2]. Little is known about imaging this condition. We report the sonographic, CT, and MRI features of a pathologically proven renal cavernous hemangioma.


Case Report
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
A 22-year-old woman presented in a community hospital with recurring cystitis that sometimes was accompanied by fever. The patient reported that for more than 5 years, she had experienced a dull ache in the left flank. Routine hematology and chemistry blood tests showed no abnormalities. The initial finding for urinary sediment was 10–20 leukocytes on a high-power magnification. Results from a urine culture and cytology analysis showed no abnormalities. Sonography depicted an enlarged left kidney with no distinct tumor in it. CT scan confirmed the enlarged left kidney. In the central part of the kidney, a mass with low density was seen. The possibility of xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis was considered.

Because sterile pyuria was found, we performed a serology test for schistosomiasis and the Mantoux test for tuberculosis. Findings for both examinations were negative. Cystoscopic findings were normal, and retrograde urography of the left kidney showed a normal pelvis and calices. Renography revealed decreased function in the lower pole of the left kidney (46%) and normal function in the right kidney (54%). A sonographically guided renal biopsy obtained normal renal tissue. The patient was referred for further diagnosis and therapy. Results of routine chemistry and hematology tests were also normal. The urinary sediment now showed microscopic hematuria and no pyuria. A urine culture obtained at this time showed no pathogenic microorganisms. Sonography was repeated with a 3.5-MHz transducer (Sonoline Elegra, Siemens, Erlangen, Germany) and showed an enlarged (13.1-cm) left kidney; the prominent hilum displayed internal hypoechogenic areas. Power Doppler sonography revealed a normal vascular pattern (Fig. 1A). The results of the blood tests and sonography led us to consider renal cell carcinoma as a possible differential diagnosis, although the patient was young and the sonographic appearance was not pathognomonic.



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Fig. 1A. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Power Doppler sonogram shows normal renal vascular pattern in left kidney.

 

In an attempt to characterize the tumor as benign or malignant, we performed MRI with a 1.5-T scanner (Gyroscan ACS-NT, Philips Medical Systems, Best, The Netherlands). It revealed an enlarged left kidney with abnormal signal intensity centered in the medulla, with fingerlike extensions spreading into the renal cortex. (Fig. 1B). Compared with the normal tissue in the right kidney, the mass in the left kidney had low signal intensity on T1-weighted images and high signal intensity on T2-weighted images. The renal pelvis was normal (Fig. 1C), which ruled out a transitional cell carcinoma, and on T2-weighted images, several low intensity ring- or tubelike areas resembling flow voids were seen in the mass (Fig. 1B). The left renal vein was enlarged. During the arterial phase of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI, the left kidney displayed a normally enhancing thinned cortex. Contrast material was seen filling the mass during the venous phase (Figs. 1D and 1E). We performed MDCT angiography (Volume Zoom, Siemens) to visualize the feeding and draining vessels of this highly vascular lesion in more detail and observed thinning of the renal cortex; thick, enhancing vascular channels (Fig. 1F); and the dilated left renal vein (Fig. 1G).



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Fig. 1B. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Coronal T2-weighted image reveals high signal intensity centered in medulla of kidney with fingerlike extensions over cortex. Some flow voids (arrow) are visible.

 


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Fig. 1C. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Axial T2-weighted image obtained with fat suppression shows high-signal-intensity lesion and normal renal pelvis (arrow).

 


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Fig. 1D. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Contrast-enhanced axial T1-weighted image obtained during arterial phase shows thinned, normally enhancing cortex with low-signal-intensity lesion.

 


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Fig. 1E. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Contrast-enhanced axial T1-weighted image obtained during venous phase shows contrast filling lesion and dilated left renal vein (arrow).

 


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Fig. 1F. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Coronal multiplanar reconstruction of CT angiogram shows thinning of cortex and contrast filling of vascular channel (arrow) in lower pole of left kidney.

 


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Fig. 1G. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Coronal multiplanar reconstruction of CT angiogram reveals dilated left renal vein (arrow).

 

The presence of the flow voids, early enhancement of vascular channels, and filling of the mass with contrast material during the venous phase caused us to suspect a renal cavernous hemangioma. It was impossible to rule out malignancy, so a nephrectomy was performed and the kidney was submitted for pathologic examination. Cystic structures and microcystic conglomerates were seen protruding from the cortical surface (Fig. 1H) covered by the renal capsule and focally involving the hilum. Histologic findings were normal renal tissue consisting of normal glomeruli and tubules intermingled with vascular structures of widely varying diameters and with considerable variation in vessel wall thickness. The vascular structures were lined by flattened endothelial cells. Cellular atypia or mitosis was not observed, although the normal renal architecture was distorted by the lesion. A cavernous hemangioma was diagnosed. The biopsy specimen obtained earlier must have been acquired in the normal renal tissue.



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Fig. 1H. 22-year-old woman with dull ache in left flank and microscopic hematuria. Photograph of gross pathologic specimen from sliced kidney shows renal cortex and medulla with multicystic lesion composed of abnormal blood vessels, many containing blood and fibrin.

 


Discussion
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
In the literature, the radiologic features of renal cavernous hemangiomas are not well described, and reports of large studies are lacking. Descriptions of renal cavernous hemangiomas on angiography have included a normal appearance [3], a hypovascular mass producing varying degrees of caliceal deformity [4], and a hypervascular mass with rapid arteriovenous shunting [5]. Three case reports all described the sonographic appearance of renal cavernous hemangioma as a hyperechoic lesion [2, 6, 7], in contrast to the hypoechoic lesion we found. No color or power Doppler sonography was used in the previously cited case reports. Although we found no description of the features of the renal cavernous hemangioma on CT angiography, we found its CT appearance described as a mass that is isodense relative to the renal cortex during the excretory phase [2], a homogeneously enhancing mass with peripheral hypoenhancement during the portal phase [6], and a solid lesion of 32 H before and 58 H after contrast injection [7].

In our patient, CT angiography revealed enhancement of thick vascular channels and a dilated left renal vein. It seems likely that any of the three angiographic patterns of renal cavernous hemangiomas described in the literature [35] could also appear on CT angiography of this lesion. To our knowledge, no case report in the English-language literature describes the MRI appearance of a renal cavernous hemangioma. The abnormal signal intensity—hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on T2-weighted images—was centered in the medulla with fingerlike extensions over the renal cortex. On T2-weighted images, flow voids were seen. The normal arterial enhancement of a thinned cortex and the filling-in of the mass with contrast material during the venous phase were additional features.

Renal cavernous hemangiomas typically are pathologically proven, fibrous, thick-walled vascular structures that are comparable to the lesion described in this report. Blood flow is often slow in the channels of this lesion, which results in normal findings on power Doppler sonography, flow voids, and venous phase filling of the mass after contrast administration. In most patients, treatment consists of nephrectomy, either to rule out a renal cell carcinoma or to stop severe hematuria.

In summary, sonography showed the mass in our patient as a hypoechogenic renal mass with normal power Doppler signals. MRI showed the lesion, best seen on T2-weighted sequences, as a hyperintense mass with some flow voids. After contrast administration, the mass became filled with contrast material. On CT angiography, enhancement of thick vascular channels and a dilated renal vein were depicted. This combination of findings suggests a renal cavernous hemangioma, although a preoperative diagnosis remains difficult because there are no pathognomonic imaging findings.


References
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 

  1. Jahn H, Nissen HM. Haemangioma of the urinary tract: review of the literature. Br J Urol1991; 68:113 –117[Medline]
  2. Fujii Y, Ajima J, Oka K, Tosaka A, Takehara Y. Benign renal tumors detected among healthy adults by abdominal ultrasonography. Eur Urol 1995;27:124 –127[Medline]
  3. Gordon R, Rosenmann E, Barzilay B, Siew F. Correlation of selective angiography and pathology in cavernous hemangioma of the kidney. J Urol 1976;115:608 –609[Medline]
  4. Stanley RJ, Cubillo E, Mancilla-Jimenez R, Geisse G, Melson GL. Cavernous hemangioma of the kidney. AJR1975; 125:682 –687[Abstract]
  5. Ferrer-Roda J, Sanjuan C, Vilar J, Villanueva A, Baeza R. Hemangioma of the kidney. Eur Urol1983; 9:189 –190[Medline]
  6. Moody JA, Litwin MS, Cochran ST, Moe A, Sahmedini D. Renal cavernous hemangioma in a patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. J Urol 1996;156:1759 –1760[Medline]
  7. Numan F, Berkmen T, Korman U, Ogut G, Cokyuksel O. Cavernous hemangioma of the kidney: case report. Clin Imaging1993; 17:106 –108[Medline]

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