RESUMEN
We present a 49-year-old woman requiring living donor liver transplantation after liver metastasis from a pancreatic solid pseudopapillary tumor. After identifying a pancreatic mass and liver lesions, she underwent extensive surgical resection. Pathology revealed a solid pseudopapillary neoplasm of the head and body of the pancreas, extending into the peripancreatic soft tissues and confirmed to have spread to the liver. Subsequently, she underwent adjuvant chemotherapy and radiofrequency ablations of the new liver lesions. Despite immunotherapy and chemotherapy, there was a progression of the lesions. With interval growth of liver lesions, without evidence of extrahepatic disease, she underwent living donor liver transplantation.
RESUMEN
A 36-year-old man with known granulomatosis with polyangiitis underwent quantitative ventilation-perfusion pulmonary scintigraphy as part of an initial evaluation for lung transplant candidacy. Radiotracer uptake on the perfusion study has the appearance of the hepatic silhouette, drawing initial concern that there may have been a misadministration of Tc with a hepatobiliary agent. Comparison CT reveals extensive cystic bronchiectasis, parenchymal destruction, and volume loss involving the entire left lung and basal portions of the right lung, with the residual portions of functional lung parenchyma conforming to a shape similar to the liver.