Respirology Case Reports (May 2022)

Intrathoracic lipoma of the chest wall that appeared relatively rapidly and could be resected and diagnosed by minimally invasive thoracoscopic surgery: A case report

  • Yoshimitsu Hirai,
  • Yurina Mikasa,
  • Hideto Iguchi,
  • Aya Fusamoto,
  • Yumi Yata,
  • Takuya Ohashi,
  • Yoshiharu Nishimura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/rcr2.946
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The occurrence of lipoma in the thoracic cavity is relatively rare, and it is clinically difficult to distinguish it from liposarcoma. We report a case of intrathoracic lipoma that was pathologically diagnosed and differentiated from liposarcoma after minimally invasive thoracoscopic tumour resection. A 35‐year‐old male patient without any symptoms was referred to our hospital due to an abnormal shadow on chest x‐ray. Computed tomography showed a low‐attenuated round‐shaped mass of 3.6 cm × 2.3 cm in diameter in the left chest wall. On magnetic resonance imaging, the mass was displayed as a high, high and low signal mass on T1‐weighted imaging (WI), T2WI and T2WI with fat suppression, respectively. We suspected a chest wall‐type lipoma, but because it appeared in a relatively short period of time and we thought it could be liposarcoma, we performed minimally invasive thoracoscopic surgery for diagnosis and treatment. The tumour was a stalked tumour with a capsule, contiguous to the wall pleura with only a single cord‐like structure. The majority of the tumour was found free in the pleural cavity. The tumour was diagnosed as a lipoma by histopathological examination.

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