An increased parenchymal echotexture of the liver usually indicates a condition called hepatic steatosis or fatty liver disease. This means there is an abnormal accumulation of fat within the liver tissue, which can be caused by factors such as alcohol consumption, obesity, or certain medical conditions. Monitoring lifestyle changes and treating underlying conditions can help improve liver health.
Parenchyma is the functional part of an organ (while stroma is the supporting tissue). Echogenicity means ability to produce an echo. So parenchymal echogenicity means the ability of the functional part of an organ to produce an echo (for ultrasound examination for example).
Parenchymal echogenicity refers to the degree of brightness or echogenicity of the normal tissue in an organ, such as the liver or kidney, as seen on an ultrasound. Changes in parenchymal echogenicity can indicate the presence of certain diseases or conditions affecting the organ.
In mild cirrhosis the echo texture becomes course but does not effect prognosis I will post a detailed report and post it within 72hrs.
A liver filled with homogeneous parenchymal echos is one that shows no signs of disease or cirrhosis of the liver. If the liver was filled with inhomogeneous parenchymal echoes, that would show signs of disease or cirrhosis of the liver.This can indicate a number of liver disease types, such as cirrhosis, metastatic disease, fatty liver, chronic hepatitis, and lymph proliferative disease. Further investigation is needed for a definitive diagnosis.
Bilateral renal disease affects the kidneys and functions of the genitourinary system of the body. A physician who gives this diagnosis will explain the disease and treatment options.
Heterogeneous echo texture refers to an abnormality in organ tissue, but it is not specific. Further evaluation is needed to determine why this is occurring.
Risk is increased if there is cirrhosis, for example alcoholic or viral hepatitis related.
Homogeneous parenchymal echotexture refers to an ultrasound finding where the tissue being examined (such as the liver or kidney) appears uniform in texture throughout, without any areas of abnormality or variation in echogenicity. This can suggest normal tissue architecture and lack of pathology in the organ.
It is not a "parenchymal epitexture" it is a "parenchymal echotexture" and it is indicating damage to the liver.
Chronic renal parenchymal disease
is renal parenchymal disease curable