World Journal of Surgical Oncology (Jun 2006)

The tip of the iceberg: a giant pelvic atypical lipoma presenting as a sciatic hernia

  • Stewart Ken J,
  • Smith Graeme HM,
  • Skipworth Richard JE,
  • Anderson David N

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7819-4-33
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. 33

Abstract

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Abstract Background This case report highlights two unusual surgical phenomena: lipoma-like well-differentiated liposarcomas and sciatic hernias. It illustrates the need to be aware that hernias may not always simply contain intra-abdominal viscera. Case presentation A 36 year old woman presented with an expanding, yet reducible, right gluteal mass, indicative of a sciatic hernia. However, magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a large intra- and extra-pelvic fatty mass traversing the greater sciatic foramen. The tumour was surgically removed through an abdomino-perineal approach. Subsequent pathological examination revealed an atypical lipomatous tumour (synonym: lipoma-like well-differentiated liposarcoma). The patient remains free from recurrence two years following her surgery. Conclusion The presence of a gluteal mass should always suggest the possibility of a sciatic hernia. However, in this case, the hernia consisted of an atypical lipoma spanning the greater sciatic foramen. Although lipoma-like well-differentiated liposarcomas have only a low potential for recurrence, the variable nature of fatty tumours demands that patients require regular clinical and radiological review.