Abstract

BackgroundPrimary pediatric liver tumors are scarce. Undifferentiated embryonal sarcoma of the liver (UESL) embraces nine to fifteen percent of the pediatric hepatic neoplasms. Mesenchymal hamartoma of the liver (MHL) is the second most prevalent benign pediatric hepatic neoplasm following infantile hemangioendothelioma.Case presentationA 6-year-old female child presented with vague diffuse abdominal pain and palpable right lumbar mass by clinical examination. The US showed a well-circumscribed large right hepatic complex multilocular cystic lesion with multiple internal septations and some turbid loculi. The constellation of CT and dynamic MRI findings raised the presence of atypical suspicious complex cystic hepatic mass lesion with hemorrhagic, calcific entities and internal soft tissue enhancement. The histopathological correlation proved UESL on the background of MHL.ConclusionsA case of a pediatric hepatic complex cystic lesion, which had typical ultrasound features of MHL, however, CT and MRI had atypical suspicious criteria. Finally, our case is presented as UESL in the background of MHL based upon pathological diagnosis. The radiologists must be familiar with overlapped entities between MHL, UESL, and other differential diagnosis entities regarding pediatric hepatic neoplasms.

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