RadDx logo

Report phrase | Abdomen | ct / ultrasound / mri

hypodense liver lesion

Hypodense Liver Lesion is report wording commonly used when radiologists describe liver lesion in a concise, technical way. The phrase itself is descriptive, not a diagnosis, and still needs the rest of the report for context.

"hypodense liver lesion" is radiology report language linked to liver lesion and is best understood in the context of the full imaging report.

Need Help With Your Own Report?

Understand Your Radiology Report

Paste your radiology report into RadDx and get a calm, plain-English explanation of the report language.

Analyze My Report

Educational only. RadDx helps explain report wording and does not replace clinician guidance.

Works with CT, MRI, ultrasound, and X-ray reports.

Example report wording

hypodense liver lesion

Plain-English explanation

Hypodense Liver Lesion is report wording commonly used when radiologists describe liver lesion in a concise, technical way. The phrase itself is descriptive, not a diagnosis, and still needs the rest of the report for context.

How common this wording is

Focal liver findings are commonly reported because abdominal imaging is common and many lesions are found incidentally.

When doctors worry more

  • The lesion is described as enhancing, indeterminate, or suspicious
  • There is a history of cancer or cirrhosis
  • The report recommends contrast MRI or multiphasic imaging

Main finding guide

This phrase usually maps back to the broader finding guide for Liver Lesion.

Read the Liver Lesion guide

Clear medical disclaimer

Educational information only. Always consult your clinician for medical advice.

Phrase pages explain radiology wording for education only. They do not diagnose a condition or replace clinician guidance.

Sources

Sources and medical review process

RadDx finding pages are written for patient education using consumer-friendly radiology references, plain-language terminology resources, and cautious summary review of common imaging follow-up frameworks.

Reviewed by
RadDx Editorial Team
Last reviewed
March 10, 2026

Sources are used for patient education context and terminology support. They do not replace clinician review of your individual report.

Important Notice

Educational use only. RadDx does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, or clinician supervision.

Not for emergencies. If you may have a medical emergency, call 911 or seek immediate care.

Do not submit names, dates of birth, phone numbers, MRNs, addresses, or other identifying health information.