Korean J Obstet Gynecol Search

CLOSE


Korean Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology 2004;47(6):1236-1240.
Published online June 1, 2004.
A Case of Lipoleiomyoma.
Min Jeong Kim, Sae Min Chung, Yun Jin Moon, Seung Geun Park, Min Woo Kim, Yeo Kyu Dong, Soya Paik, Yong Hun Chee
1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Boondang Jaesang Hospital, Korea.
2Department of Radiology, Boondang Jaesang Hospital, Korea.
3Department of Diagnostic Pathology, Boondang Jaesang Hospital, Korea.
Abstract
Uterine lipoleiomyoma are rare benign tumors consisting of smooth muscle and mature adipose tissue. Because of their rarity, fat content, and variable gross morphology, they may be mistaken on radiodiagnosis for the much more common benign cystic ovarian teratoma. The key to differentiate these lesions is the identification of the organ of origin. A mass that arises from the uterus is most likely a lipomatous uterine tumors. Because malignant degeneration occurs in 1-2% of benign cystic ovarian teratomas, their differentiation can be clinically significant. While these tumors are treated by surgical excision, asymptomatic lipomatous uterine tumors and benign pelvic lipomas may require no therapy. The fatty nature of the lipoleiomyoma was demonstrated with standard spin-echo Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and further supported using fat- suprressed inversion recovery MRI. MRI also clearly depicted the intrauterine location of the tumor. We report a case in which a preoperative diagnosis of a uterine lipoleiomyoma was made with MRI and fat suppressed MRI.
Key Words: Lipoleiomyoma, Uterus, MRI, Fat suppressed MRI


ABOUT
ARTICLE & TOPICS
Article category

Browse all articles >

Topics

Browse all articles >

BROWSE ARTICLES
POLICY
FOR CONTRIBUTORS
Editorial Office
4th Floor, 36 Gangnam-daero 132-gil, Gangnam-gu, Seoul 06044, Korea.
Tel: +82-2-2266-7238    Fax: +82-2-3445-2440    E-mail: journal@ogscience.org                

Copyright © 2024 by Korean Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Developed in M2PI

Close layer
prev next