Search Frames
Search No frames
PathWeb Home
©
Feed Back
About
Chronic Passive Congestion
Click on Image to Enlarge it
Chronic Passive Congestion

Cut surface of the liver showing the typical "nutmeg" picture of a chronic passive congestion.
This lesion represents alternate areas of dark red color (due to the congestion of the central veins), surrounded by paler, yellowish colored, periportal hepatocytes, which often show evidence of fatty change.
The fatty metamorphosis is responsible for the yellowish coloration.
(Description By:T.V. Rajan, M.D., Ph.D. )
(Image Contrib. by:Melinda Sanders, M.D. UCHC )
Chronic Passive Congestion
Etiology

Any disease that results in right heart failure can cause chronic passive congestion of the liver.
Pathogenesis

Right heart failure results in delayed emptying of the great veins and retention of blood primarily in the central veins of the liver.
This results in dilatation of central veins and pooling of blood in the sinusoids towards the center of the liver lobule.,
Epidemiology

Common.
General Gross Description

Grossly, the liver is enlarged, deep red and somewhat soft.
The lesion can be palpated clinically by an enlarged liver with characteristically rounded edges.
On cut surface, the liver oozes a considerable amount of blood.
The contrast between the central congested sinusoidal space the peripheral paler areas, often with some evidence of fatty change, results in a striking appearance referred to as a "nutmeg" liver, since it resembles a bisected nutmeg.
General Microscopic Description

The lesion is characterized by distended central veins full of blood, and congestion of sinusoids in the centrilobular area.
Clinical Correlation

Aside from the enlargement of the liver, chronic passive congestion has no clinical significance.
If the lesion develops acutely with centri-lobular necrosis, some evidence of liver cell death in the form of elevated transaminases may be seen.
References

Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 872-873.
Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 13th Ed: Isselbach et. al. (eds). New York, McGraw-Hill, 1994, pp. 1489.
Chronic Passive Congestion
Synopsis by: T.V.Rajan, M.D., Ph.D. (T56000M36142)[487]
Search Medline at National Library of Medicine
Please be patient during transfer. Medline will open in a new window. To return, close the Medline Window
Search Frames
Search No frames
PathWeb Home
©
Feed Back
About