Beaver tail liver and Riedel lobe

Case contributed by Abdelmonem Mahmoud , 11 Sep 2020
Diagnosis certain
Changed by Mostafa Elfeky, 12 Sep 2020

Updates to Case Attributes

Status changed from pending review to published (public).
Published At was set to .
Body was changed:

Beaver tail liver is an elongated left liver lobe that extends laterally to contact and surround the spleen (normal variant). This is also known as a sliver of liver and is a variant of hepatic morphology.

This variant is more common in females. The liver parenchyma is normal and thereby has the same risks of hepatic pathology as the rest of the liver except in trauma, where it is more prone to injury following trauma to the left upper quadrant or lower left chest.

Riedel lobe was described in 1888 as a tongue-like projection of the anterior border of the right lobe in several female patients who had palpable masses in the right hypochondrium.

  • -<p><a href="/articles/beaver-tail-liver">Beaver tail liver</a> is an elongated left liver lobe that extends laterally to contact and surround the spleen (<a href="/articles/normal-variant">normal variant</a>). This is also known as <a href="/articles/a-sliver-of-liver">a sliver of liver</a> and is a variant of hepatic morphology.</p><p>This variant is more common in females. The liver parenchyma is normal and thereby has the same risks of hepatic pathology as the rest of the liver except in trauma, where it is more prone to injury following trauma to the left upper quadrant or lower left chest.</p><p><a href="/articles/riedel-lobe-3">Riedel lobe</a> was described in 1888 as a tongue-like projection of the anterior border of the right lobe in several female patients who had palpable masses in the right hypochondrium.</p>
  • +<p><a href="/articles/beaver-tail-liver">Beaver tail liver</a> is an elongated left liver lobe that extends laterally to contact and surround the spleen (<a href="/articles/normal-variant">normal variant</a>). This is also known as a <a href="/articles/a-sliver-of-liver">sliver of liver</a> and is a variant of hepatic morphology.</p><p>This variant is more common in females. The liver parenchyma is normal and thereby has the same risks of hepatic pathology as the rest of the liver except in trauma, where it is more prone to injury following trauma to the left upper quadrant or lower left chest.</p><p><a href="/articles/riedel-lobe-3">Riedel lobe</a> was described in 1888 as a tongue-like projection of the anterior border of the right lobe in several female patients who had palpable masses in the right hypochondrium.</p>

References changed:

  • 1. Yano K, Ohtsubo M, Mizota T et-al. Riedel's lobe of the liver evaluated by multiple imaging modalities. (2000) Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan). 39 (2): 136-8. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.39.136">doi:10.2169/internalmedicine.39.136</a> - <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10732830">Pubmed</a> <span class="ref_v4"></span>
  • 2. Atalar MH, Karakus K. Beaver tail liver. (2018) Abdominal radiology (New York). 43 (7): 1851-1852. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1007/s00261-017-1395-x">doi:10.1007/s00261-017-1395-x</a> - <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29167946">Pubmed</a> <span class="ref_v4"></span>
  • https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10732830
  • https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29167946

Updates to Study Attributes

Findings was changed:

Coronal and axial CT images show the inferior lobe of the liver lying below the costal margin, and elongated left liver lobe extends laterally and in close contact with the spleen.

Images Changes:

Image CT (non-contrast) ( update )

Specifics was set to non-contrast.
Single Or Stack Root was set to .
Perspective was set to Axial.

How to use cases

You can use Radiopaedia cases in a variety of ways to help you learn and teach.

Creating your own cases is easy.