Introduction
Lipoma is the most common mesenchymal neoplasm; conventionally in people aged over 40 years, occurring in the superficial soft tissue in the neck, shoulder and back.1 Despite the presence of abundant periorbital and retro bulbar fat, benign lipoma is uncommon in the orbital region with the reported incidence of 0.6% in a large orbital tumor series.2
These are well-circumscribed, asymptomatic with gradual growth, behaving as a mass that displace rather than infiltrate the surrounding tissue and may lead to exophthalmos.
They have distinct low attenuation on CT scan and do not enhance on contrast, while they are hyperintense on T1 weighted images and follow surrounding fatty signal on all images in MRI. They are composed of lobulated mature adipose tissue surrounded by a fine capsule histologically.2
Herein we present a case of orbital lipoma. The study adhered to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki. Although institutional approval was not required as it was case report, the patient has provided written consent to publish the case details and photographs.
Case Report
A male aged 36 years presented with forward budging of the right eye for 2 months, which was gradual in onset, progressive with no change in size during straining. It was associated with on and off redness of the right eye (Figure 1A). There was no history of trauma, diminution of vision, pain or double vision. He had initially consulted an eye hospital where he was advised for thyroid function test and CT scan of head and orbit.
On ocular examination, he had visual acuity of 20/20 in both eyes. Lid retraction was present in the right eye, however lagophthalmos was not present. He had an axial proptosis of 12 mm in the right eye with positive resistance to retropulsion and fluctuating fatty mass could be palpated in the lateral aspect of the orbit. Nevertheless, extraocular motility was full in all the cardinal gazes in both the eyes.
His anterior segment and fundus evaluation were within normal limits with pupils being round, regular and reacting to both direct and consensual light without relative afferent pupillary defect. Thyroid function test was also normal.
CT scan of head and orbit revealed proptosis with slight inferior displacement of right eyeball. There was prominence of retro bulbar fat spaces between the optic nerve and lateral rectus muscle with indentation over the retrobulbar portion of optic nerve and right lateral muscle. No surrounding inflammatory or bony changes were noted.
MRI of brain and orbit was done, which revealed a 5.5⨰2⨰2.5 cm sized T1, T2, and Fluid Attenuation Inversion Recovery (FLAIR) high signal intensity mass in the intraconal compartment in the lateral aspect of the right orbit. This was completely suppressed in the Short T1 Inversion Recovery (STIR) images (Figure 2). The mass was displacing the optic nerve medially and globe anteriorly with resultant proptosis. No enhancement was seen in post contrast images. All these findings indicated a possible diagnosis of orbital lipoma and was differentiated from orbital fat prolapse due to presence of proptosis, resistance to retropulsion, nonfluctuating nature of the mass on external pressure and additional evidence from imaging.
He underwent right transcutaneous transeptal superior anterior orbitotomy and excisional biopsy under general anesthesia. After painting and draping, traction suture was placed in the gray line of the upper lid; the upper lid crease incision about 2.5 cm was given in the lateral two thirds of the upper lid; orbicularis was separated; orbital septum identified and opened; mass was identified and dissected off the surrounding tissue (Figure 1B); the entire mass was separated and removed in total; the orbit was inspected for any remaining mass, and the septum was closed after washing with antibiotic and wound was closed in layers.
The mass measured 5⨰5 cm and pale yellow in color with overlying capsule (Figure 3A). It was sent for histopathological examination. The dispatched histopathological report revealed encapsulated tumor composed of lobules of mature adipocytes along with fibro collagenous septa, with the final diagnosis of lipoma (Figure 3B).
Postoperatively, the patient last followed-up two months after surgery. He had visual acuity of 20/20 with full range of extraocular motility. Proptosis had completely subsided but the patient did have mild ptosis (Figure 1C). Nevertheless the patient was very satisfied with the outcome.
Discussion
A true lipoma is an encapsulated benign tumor composed of adult fat cells separated by fibrous septa.3 Although its occurrence is common in the subcutaneous tissue, it is rarely found in the orbit despite the presence of abundant fatty tissue.2,4
A study by Shield et al5 in 2004 reviewed 1264 patients with orbital lesions and noted only two patients with lipoma whose average age was 35 years. The reported incidence is largest in a pre-imaging era report by Forrest with its incidence being 8.5% (19 out of 222).2 On reviewing the literature this is the first reported case from Nepal with another case being mentioned in the study by Bastola et al.6
Orbital lipoma arises mainly from the anterior orbit. It is usually well-circumscribed and may be clinically obvious and palpable before the proptosis becomes visible. Generally, it is asymptomatic until it becomes large.2 Orbital lipoma rarely grows and compresses the optic nerve resulting in disturbance in visual function including decreased visual acuity, relative afferent pupillary defect and visual field defect.7 In our case, the finding and history was similar to that of Chi et al7 from Korea but unlike their case, our case did not have disturbance of visual function.
On CT scan, typically lipoma appears as distinctive low attenuation lesion sometimes with a finely defined border. On MRI, it is hyperintense on T1 weighted image. However, it is not enhanced after contrast.8 Histologically, lipoma is composed of lobulated mature adipose tissue surrounded by a fine capsule.2
Surgical excision is the recommended treatment for orbital lipoma. It is done not only for diagnosis and symptomatic relief, but also to rule out malignancy.9 The long-term outcome after surgery is seen to be excellent.2 Our case obliges with all of these reported findings.
In conclusion, a well circumscribed mass of orbital lipoma can result in proptosis of the eyeball, which is an uncommon cause; surgical excision of the mass can result in long-term excellent outcome cosmetically, helps to rule out malignancy and establish a histological diagnosis.
Disclosure
The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.
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Abstract
A 36 year old male presented with a two-month history of a progressively increasing proptosis of the right eye associated with redness. MRI of brain and orbit revealed a mass in the intraconal compartment in the lateral aspect of the right orbit that had T1, T2, and FLAIR high signal intensity and was completely suppressed in the STIR image. Excisional biopsy of the mass resolved the proptosis, and histology revealed encapsulated tumor composed of lobules of mature adipocytes along with fibro collagenous septa. Thus, diagnosis of lipoma was established that has uncommon occurrence in the orbital region.
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer