Applied Sciences (Sep 2021)

First Report and 3D Reconstruction of a Presumptive Microscopic Liver Lipoma in a Black Barbel (<i>Barbus balcanicus</i>) from the River Bregalnica in the Republic of North Macedonia

  • Katerina Rebok,
  • Maja Jordanova,
  • Júlia Azevedo,
  • Eduardo Rocha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11188392
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 18
p. 8392

Abstract

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A lipoma is a benign tumour of mature adipocytes which may appear in various species, including marine and freshwater fish. It usually occurs in isolated locations, such as a superficial or deep mass, mainly in the skin and seldom in other organs. In non-mammalian vertebrates, there is no agreed minimal size for the mass to be considered a lipoma. This study histologically describes a case proposed to be a microlipoma in the liver of Barbus balcanicus. The structure was an oval-shaped mass of well-differentiated adipocytes, surrounded by hepatic parenchyma. The adipocyte cluster did not contact with major vascular or biliary tracts, the liver capsule, or the hilum. The cell mass reached a maximal linear length and width of ~0.5 mm and ~0.4 mm. A three-dimensional and software-assisted reconstruction of the adipocytic mass showed that it had the shape of a flattened prolate spheroid (~0.01 mm3). Given the histological criteria currently used in the literature, we consider the mass as a lipoma, or, better, a microlipoma because it was tiny. We interpret this structure as an early growing lipoma. This work is the second description of a liver lipoma in a fish to the best of our knowledge.

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