You are on page 1of 3

4/14/2018 Liver Abscess Workup: Laboratory Studies, Imaging Studies, Percutaneous Aspiration and Drainage

This site is intended for healthcare professionals

Liver Abscess Workup


Updated: Jun 08, 2017
Author: Ruben Peralta, MD, FACS; Chief Editor: John Geibel, MD, DSc, MSc, AGAF more...

WORKUP

Laboratory Studies
Laboratory studies may include a complete blood count (CBC) with differential (to identify anemia
of chronic disease or neutrophilic leukocytosis) and liver function studies (hypoalbuminemia and
elevation of alkaline phosphatase are the most common abnormalities; elevations of transaminase
and bilirubin levels are variable.

Blood cultures are positive in roughly 50% of cases. Culture of abscess fluid should be the goal in
establishing microbiologic diagnosis.

Enzyme immunoassay should be performed to detect E histolytica in patients either from endemic
areas or who have traveled to endemic areas.

Imaging Studies
Advances in radiologic techniques has been credited with the improvement in mortality. The
various radiologic techniques have differing benefits and limitations with regard to their diagnostic
utility (see the image below).

Table 3: Comparison of the radiologic procedures used in the diagnosis of liver abscess.

Computed tomography

Computed tomography (CT) with contrast and ultrasonography remain the radiologic modalities of
choice as screening procedures and also can be used as techniques for guiding percutaneous
aspiration and drainage.

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/188802-workup 1/3
4/14/2018 Liver Abscess Workup: Laboratory Studies, Imaging Studies, Percutaneous Aspiration and Drainage

With advancements in multidetector CT technology, image quality has improved dramatically,


allowing improved detection. CT has a sensitivity of 95-100% in this setting (see the images
below).

Computed tomography (CT) scan findings of liver abscess are shown. A large, septated abscess of the right hepatic lobe
is revealed. Abscess was successfully treated with percutaneous drainage and antimicrobial therapy.

Computed tomography (CT) scan findings of liver abscess are shown. A large anterior abscess involving the left hepatic
lobe is revealed. Abscess was successfully treated with percutaneous drainage and antimicrobial therapy.

Lesions on CT evaluation are well-demarcated areas hypodense to the surrounding hepatic


parenchyma. Peripheral enhancement is seen when intravenous (IV) contrast is administered. Gas
can be seen in as many as 20% of lesions.

CT is superior in its ability to detect lesions less than 1 cm. This technique also enables evaluation
for an underlying concurrent pathology throughout the abdomen and pelvis. Indium-labeled white
blood cell (WBC) scans are somewhat more sensitive in this regard.

A retrospective study was undertaken using patient records from a group of 131 patients with
confirmed pyogenic liver abscesses to determine CT scan characteristics of those abscesses
caused by monomicrobial K pneumoniae infection versus other causes. A comparison was
performed between the K pneumoniae liver abscess patients and a comparison group. Notably,
only 70.2% of the cases were determined to be monomicrobial K pneumoniae liver abscesses. CT
scan characteristics more likely to be seen in these monomicrobial liver abscesses were (1) a
single abscess, (2) unilobar involvement, (3) solid appearance, (4) association with
thrombophlebitis, and (5) hematogenous appearance. [7]

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/188802-workup 2/3
4/14/2018 Liver Abscess Workup: Laboratory Studies, Imaging Studies, Percutaneous Aspiration and Drainage

Ultrasonography

Ultrasonographic evaluation (sensitivity, 80-90%) reveals hypoechoic masses with irregularly


shaped borders. Internal septations or cavity debris may be detected. [8] It allows close evaluation
of the biliary tree and simultaneous aspiration of the cavity. The major benefits of this modality are
its portability and diagnostic utility in patients who are too critical to undergo prolonged radiologic
evaluation or to be moved out of monitored setting. Operator dependence affects its overall
sensitivity.

Radionuclide scanning

The initial studies are used in diagnosis. [9] Gallium and technetium radionuclide scanning use the
fact that the radiopharmaceuticals share the same uptake, transport, and excretion pathways as
bilirubin and, thus, are effective agents in evaluating liver disease. Sensitivity varies with the
radiopharmaceutical utilized, technetium (80%), gallium (50-80%), and indium (90%). Limitations
include a delay in diagnosis and the need for confirmatory procedures; thus, they offer no benefit
over other imaging modalities.

Chest radiography

Chest radiographic findings of basilar atelectasis, right hemidiaphragm elevation, and right pleural
effusion are present in approximately 50% of cases; before advancements in radiologic technique,
these served as diagnostic clues. Pneumonias or pleural diseases often are initially considered
because of the radiographic findings.

Percutaneous Aspiration and Drainage


Percutaneous needle aspiration

Under CT or ultrasonographic guidance, needle aspiration of cavity material can be performed.


Needle aspiration enables rapid recovery of material for microbiologic and pathologic evaluation. It
can be performed with the initial diagnostic procedure.

Percutaneous catheter drainage


Percutaneous drainage has become the standard of care and should be the first intervention
considered for small cysts. Advantages include reduced costs, recovery time, and postprocedure
recovery rate; it eliminates the need for general anesthesia. This also allows for gradual, controlled
drainage. For cysts larger than 5 cm, ruptured cysts, and multiloculated cysts, surgical drainage is
generally recommended over percutaneous intervention.

A catheter is placed under ultrasonographic or CT guidance via the Seldinger or trocar techniques.
The catheter is flushed daily until output is less than 10 mL/day or cavity collapse is documented
by serial CT.

Multiple abscesses have been drained successfully by this method. Failure to respond to catheter
drainage is the main reported complication and is also an indication for surgical intervention. Other
complications reported (rarely) are bleeding at the catheter site, perforation of hollow viscus, and
peritonitis from intraperitoneal spillage of cavity fluid.

Contraindications include coagulopathy; a difficult access path to the cavity; peritonitis; and/or a
complicated, multiloculated, thick-walled abscess with viscous pus.

Treatment & Management

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/188802-workup 3/3

You might also like