Pleural lipoma: a non-surgical lesion?

Pleural lipomas are benign tumours that develop at the expense of adipose tissues, and they never evolve towards liposarcoma. Located usually at the mediastinal, bronchial and pulmonary levels, a pleural situation is extremely rare. Chest X-rays usually detect them and computed tomography scans conf...

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Veröffentlicht in:Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery 2012-06, Vol.14 (6), p.735-738
Hauptverfasser: Jayle, Christophe, Hajj-Chahine, Jamil, Allain, Geraldine, Milin, Serge, Soubiron, Laurent, Corbi, Pierre
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container_end_page 738
container_issue 6
container_start_page 735
container_title Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery
container_volume 14
creator Jayle, Christophe
Hajj-Chahine, Jamil
Allain, Geraldine
Milin, Serge
Soubiron, Laurent
Corbi, Pierre
description Pleural lipomas are benign tumours that develop at the expense of adipose tissues, and they never evolve towards liposarcoma. Located usually at the mediastinal, bronchial and pulmonary levels, a pleural situation is extremely rare. Chest X-rays usually detect them and computed tomography scans confirm the diagnosis. As complications occur, a wait-and-see policy is common. We report our pleural lipoma surgical exeresis experience since 1999. We have operated on five cases of pleural lipomas among nearly 1800 cases of thoracic exeresis: three male and two female patients, without obesity (in all cases, body mass index (BMI) < 28). The mean age was 54.6 years (range 35-72 years). Four patients were electively operated and one in emergency, three with video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) procedure and two with open chest surgery, without recurrent cases. Advancements in VATS have greatly reduced the morbidity rate of these benign tumours especially if exeresis is performed early on a small, uncomplicated adhesion-free tumour. On the other hand, the operation may be deleterious, complicated by the presence of a large lipoma or in a complicating situation. In our opinion, we should revise the wait-and-see policy when facing these lesions considering their evolutionary potential. We should advise VATS in pleural lipomas.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/icvts/ivs052
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source Oxford Journals Open Access Collection
subjects Adult
Aged
Female
France
Humans
Institutional Reports
Lipoma - diagnostic imaging
Lipoma - surgery
Lipoma - therapy
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Selection
Pleural Neoplasms - diagnostic imaging
Pleural Neoplasms - surgery
Pleural Neoplasms - therapy
Radiography
Retrospective Studies
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Thoracic Surgery, Video-Assisted - adverse effects
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Watchful Waiting
title Pleural lipoma: a non-surgical lesion?
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