Lipoma

Lipomas are common benign tumors composed of mature adipocytes, usually presenting as soft, mobile, painless subcutaneous nodules on the trunk, shoulders, neck, or extremities. Most are solitary and small (<5 cm), but multiple lesions can occur, including in familial multiple lipomatosis. While typically asymptomatic, lipomas may cause discomfort due to size, location, or cosmetic concerns. Diagnosis is clinical; imaging is reserved for deep, rapidly enlarging, atypical, or painful lesions to exclude liposarcoma. Treatment is elective; options include surgical excision (definitive) and minimally invasive techniques such as liposuction for select cases.

Epidemiology and Risk Factors

  • Peak in adults 40–60 years; slight male predominance in some series.
  • Risk factors: genetics (familial multiple lipomatosis; syndromes like PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome, MEN1, Gardner syndrome), obesity not clearly causal.
  • Variants: angiolipoma (often tender), fibrolipoma, spindle cell/pleomorphic lipoma (distinct histology, usually posterior neck/shoulder of older men), intramuscular/infiltrating lipoma, lipoblastoma (children).

Clinical Features

  • Soft, doughy, lobulated, well-circumscribed subcutaneous mass; freely mobile over underlying structures.
  • Size typically 1–5 cm; can slowly enlarge over years.
  • Angiolipomas are firmer, often multiple on forearms, and tender.
  • Deep or intramuscular lipomas feel less mobile and can be larger.

Differential Diagnosis

  • Epidermal inclusion cyst, liposarcoma (particularly atypical lipomatous tumor/well-differentiated liposarcoma), lymphadenopathy, hematoma, neurofibroma, elastofibroma dorsi (scapular region), hernia (abdominal wall), xanthomas (tendinous).

Diagnosis and Workup

  • Clinical diagnosis for typical small, superficial, slow-growing lesions.
  • Imaging when atypical:
    • Ultrasound: homogenous, hyperechoic mass with thin capsule.
    • MRI: characteristic high T1 signal suppressed on fat-sat; septations <2 mm favor benign lipoma; thick septa, nodularity, or nonfatty areas raise concern for ALT/WDL.
  • Biopsy rarely required unless imaging or clinical features are suspicious (rapid growth, pain, size >5–10 cm, deep location, firm/fixed, neurologic symptoms).

Management

  • Observation if asymptomatic and typical.
  • Excision:
    • Indications: pain, rapid growth, functional limitation, cosmetic reasons, diagnostic uncertainty.
    • Technique: longitudinal incision over lesion; blunt dissection to shell out encapsulated mass; hemostasis; layered closure. Recurrence is rare if complete.
    • Complications: seroma, hematoma, infection, scarring; higher risk with larger/deep lesions.
  • Liposuction-assisted removal:
    • For large, soft, subcutaneous lipomas in favorable locations to minimize scarring; higher recurrence if capsule remnants remain.
  • Angiolipomas: excision for symptomatic lesions; often multiple.

Counseling and Follow-up

  • Benign with minimal malignant potential; transformation is exceedingly rare—concern is misdiagnosis.
  • Return if rapid change, pain, firmness, fixation, or neurologic deficits.

References (recent guidelines and key reviews)

  • Imaging characteristics distinguishing lipoma from ALT/WDL, 2021–2024.
  • Surgical techniques and outcomes for lipoma excision vs liposuction, 2021–2024.
  • Syndromic associations with multiple lipomas, 2022–2024.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *