Intrapulmonary lipoma: a case report and literature review
Chun-Mei Zhu, Li Chang, Xiu-Shan Ge, Xin-Yu Yuan, Ling Cao
Beijing, China
Author Affiliations: Respirology Department (Zhu CM, Chang L, Ge XS, Cao L) and Radiology Department, Children's Hospital of Capital Institute of Pediatrics, Beijing, China (Yuan XY)
Corresponding Author: Ling Cao, MD, Respirology Department, Children's Hospital of Capital Institute of Pediatrics, Beijing, China (Tel: +86 10 85695629; Fax: +86 10 85628367; Email: Caoling9919@163.com)
doi: 10.1007/s12519-015-0011-9
Background: Intrapulmonary lipoma is extemely rare in children. So far, all reported pulmonary lipomas were from adult patients.
Methods: We present herein a case of intrapulmonary lipoma in a child and a review of the related literature.
Results: A 13-month-old boy was hospitalized because of cough and fever. Chest CT showed patchy infiltration and round-shape, hypodense homogeneous lesions located in the lung. After 19 days of antibiotic treatment, his clinic symptoms disappeared, but the round lesions remained without any change. One month and one year later, he was examined by chest MRI with technique of fat suppression. The child was diagnosed as having an intrapulmonary lipoma without biopsy.
Conclusions: Intrapulmonary lipoma is rare in children. Chest CT and MRI are very important for the correct diagnosis of intrapulmonary lipoma.
World J Pediatr 2015;11(2):185-187
Key words: chest imaging;
diagnosis;
intrapulmonary lipoma
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