Vojnosanitetski Pregled (Jan 2023)

Giant intrapericardial lipoma: Clinical and forensic implications

  • Bogdanović Milenko,
  • Pavlekić Snežana,
  • Milošević Maja,
  • Radnić Bojana,
  • Lakčević Jovana,
  • Veljković Stefan,
  • Alempijević Đorđe,
  • Babić Miloš D.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/VSP200922023B
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 80, no. 3
pp. 275 – 278

Abstract

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Introduction. Even though lipomas are the most common benign tumors, they are rarely found in the pericardial cavity. Although histopathologically benign, they can cause life-threatening complications by rapid growth and may there-fore be clinically considered malignant. Case report. We present an 80-year-old female who was injured during a syncopal episode when falling from a standing height and suffered bodily injuries for which she was hospitalized. In the further course of her short-term hospital treatment, death occurred, and the cause of death was marked as “un-known”. At the autopsy, a dilated and tense pericardium filling up a large part of the chest cavity was noted. A well-encapsulated soft tissue mass, 2 0 × 1 8 × 3 cm in size, weighing 820 g, was visualized in the pericardial cavity. Histopathological examination revealed that the mass was a lipoma and showed acute myocardial necrosis; therefore, it was assumed that the cause of death was probably due to the compression of lipoma on coronary arteries. Conclusion. Even though intrapericardial lipomas are benign tumors, they can cause life-threatening complications and sudden cardiac death. There are numerous diagnostic methods capable of detecting intrapericardial lipomas, and with timely treatment, the patient can be cured.

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