Discussion
Diagnosis With Brief Discussion
- Diagnosis
- Angiolipoma of the mediastinum
- Radiologic Findings
- Chest PA radiograph shows a paracardiac mass. Unenhanced CT scan(7.5mm thickness) shows a mediastinal mass just lateral to IVC.with homogeneous soft tissue density (HU 20). Contrast-enhanced CT scan(5mm thickness) and coronal reformat image(1.5mm thickness) show an highly enhanced mass mixed with fatty region.
Photomicrograph shows a combination of mature adipose tissue and multiple small blood vessels (H & E).
- Brief Review
- Angiolipoma is a rare benign soft tissue tumor, an unusual variant of lipoma, consisting of fatty and vascular components.
Lin et al.(1) defined the characteristics of the tumor as follows: (a) gross evidence of tumor formation with or without capsule, (b) microscopic evidence of a tumor population of at least 50% mature lipocytes, (c) microscopic evidence of angiomatous proliferation inside the tumor.
Angiolipomas account for 5-17% of all lipomas. They are located mainly in the subcutis of the trunk or extremities. Uncommon locations cited in the literature have included the orbit, breast, parotid gland, palate, rib, mandible, mediastinum, intramedullary and epidural spine, and brain. Mediastinal angiolipoma is very rare and several cases of posterior mediastinal angiolipoma were only reported.
In this case, the mass exhibited homogeneous soft tissue density on unenhanced CT scans, and fatty component was only detected on enhanced axial scan and coronal thin reformat image. The raito of adipose to vascular tissue found in angiolipomas varies, ranging from a neoplasm that is predominantly lipomatous with a small angiomatous focus, to one in which dense vascular and stromal elements have replaced most of the fat(2). The differential diagnosis in this case included mediastinal hemangioma, Castleman’s disease without considering fatty tumor. Liposarcoma should be differentiated as considering fatty tumor.
- References
- 1. Lin JJ, Lin F. Two entities in angiolipoma: a study of 459 cases of lipoma with a review of the literature on infiltrating angiolipoma. Cancer 1974;34:720-727
2. Weil A, Donovan RC, Tampieri D, Melanson D, Ethier R. Spnal angiolipomas: CT and MR aspects. J Comput Assist Tomogr 1991;15:83-85
3. Choi J-Y, Goo JM, Chung MI, Kim H-C, Im J-G. Angiolipoma of the posterior mediastinum with extension into the spinal canal:A case report. KJR 2000;1(4):212-214
- Keywords
- Mediastinum, Benign tumor,