Radiology Resident Case of the Week
Etiology/Pathophysiology:
1.4/1 male/female ratio; any age >10 yrs; may be associated with hyperlipoproteinemia.
Pathology:
fat: both necrotic and live cells, with trabecular thinning and dysmorphic calcifications
Miscellaneous:
no reported cases of malignant transformation. fracture is a possible complication; if there is structural concern, curettage and packing is the treatment of choice, and lipoma will not recur.
Imaging:
location: epiphysis or metaphysis >> shaft; calcaneus, extremities (proximal femur > tibia, fibula, humerus), skull, ribs. Lytic, expansile, radiolucent lesion often with sclerotic rind and cortical thinning overlying; may see loculated, septated appearance secondary to residual trabeculae; often see calcified clumps centrally secondary to fat necrosis. MR shows fat intensity.
Key references:
Dahnert, Wolfgang, Radiology Review Manual, 2nd ed.
Mirra, Joseph, Bone Tumors, 1989.
ACR Code: 4.319
Keywords: intraosseous lipoma, bone lipoma