| Literature DB >> 24393470 |
Shinichi Fukuhara, Kamellia R Dimitrova, Charles M Geller, Darryl M Hoffman, Wilson Ko, Robert F Tranbaugh1.
Abstract
Liposarcoma occurs very rarely in the mediastinum. Patients often remain asymptomatic until it grows large enough to cause direct invasion or compression of adjacent organs. We report a case of a 77-year-old male presented with dyspnea of exertion and was found to have a large mediastinal mass which was eventually diagnosed as primary mediastinal well-differentiated liposarcoma. The limited respiratory function at the initial presentation prompted phrenic nerve preserving incomplete resection rather than radical removal of the adjacent mediastinal structures. After surgical removal, the recurrence for well-differentiated mediastinal liposarcomas in the mediastinum is unknown; therefore, close follow-up is crucial.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24393470 PMCID: PMC3896736 DOI: 10.1186/1749-8090-9-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiothorac Surg ISSN: 1749-8090 Impact factor: 1.637
Figure 1Preoperative antero-posterior chest radiograph. Antero-posterior chest radiograph shows widened mediastinum and parenchymal haziness at the bases of both lungs.
Figure 2Preoperative computed tomography scan. Chest computed tomography scan at the level of pulmonary hilum (upper left image) demonstrates the multi-lobulated mass, well-defined, homogenous, low-attenuation mass in the anterior mediastinum. The other three images show lobulated mass with multiple calcific septations. The fat plane between the mass and the left pulmonary artery is focally obliterated.
Figure 3Intraoperative photograph. Intraoperative specimen, liposarcoma appearance is similar to that of mature fat.
Figure 4Histological sections. A, Adipose cells and fibrous strands with scattered “signet-ring” type cells resembling normal adipose tissue but with large, deep-stranding nuclei (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification × 200). B, Lipoblast showing lipid vacuoles and indented nucleus (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification × 400). C, Lochkern vacuole (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification × 200).
Liposarcoma subtypes
| Well-differentiated | Most common subtype (50% of liposarcomas) |
| Mature adipocytes with large fatty vacuoles | |
| None of a few lipoblasts | |
| Infrequent mitosis | |
| Variable myxomatous tissue with occasional dense hyaline sclerosis | |
| Occasional spindle cells | |
| Low grade with risk of dedifferentiation | |
| Myxoid | Most common type in pediatric age group |
| Immature mesenchymal giant cells in prominent mucopolysaccharide rich stroma | |
| Lipoblasts with mitotic figures | |
| Prominent vascularization of branching capillaries (chicken wire pattern) | |
| Includes round-cell variant as its high-grade counterpart | |
| Intermediate grade with metastatic risk especially in round-cell variant | |
| Pleomorphic | Rarest type (5–10% of liposarcomas) |
| Many lipoblasts with high mitotic rate | |
| Highly anaplastic sarcoma | |
| High grade with high risk of local recurrence and metastasis | |
| May mimic carcinoma or melanoma | |
| Dedifferentiated | Most common with retroperitoneal lesions |
| High grade with very hight risk of metastasis |