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. 2023 Mar 18;48(6):2167–2195. doi: 10.1007/s00261-023-03877-2

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

A 44-year-old male patient with a history of liver transplantation due to HBV-related cirrhosis now presenting with right upper quadrant pain and elevated LFTs. a Axial plane T2-weighted MR image showed a triangular-shaped mildly hyperintense lesion adjacent to the capsule (arrowheads). b Axial plane T1-weighted postcontrast image demonstrated peripherally located, wedge-shaped hypoenhancing parenchymal area (arrowheads). c Hepatobiliary phase MR image with hepatospecific contrast agent clearly demonstrated this abnormal parenchymal area (arrowheads). Clinical symptomatology and imaging findings were thought to represent hepatic infarction. d Follow-up CT image 6 months after the initial MR examination demonstrated regression of the non-enhancing parenchyma in the infarcted segment (arrowheads)