| Literature DB >> 31185981 |
Narges Vasei1, Azita Shishegar2, Forouzan Ghalkhani1, Mohammad Darvishi3.
Abstract
Breast fat necrosis (FN) originates from aseptic fat saponification, which is a typical lipid cyst or a spiculated lesion called mammographic presentation which mimics malignancy. In order to avoid biopsy, it would be necessary to identify the spectrum of fat necrosis appearances. A systematic research was conducted in October 2018 by using PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, Google Scholar databases and Google to search for science literature published after 2004. Therefore, the aim of this systematic review, it is that the FN can provide radiologists, surgeons, and oncologists with better insight and help them manage the condition efficiently.Entities:
Keywords: Breast; Fat necrosis; MRI; Mammography; Oncoplastic surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31185981 PMCID: PMC6560815 DOI: 10.1186/s12944-019-1078-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lipids Health Dis ISSN: 1476-511X Impact factor: 3.876
Fat necrosis various Imaging appearances (In accordance with Prasanti et al.[4])
| Cystic lesions are associated with mural nodules | Anechoic cystic mass with enhanced through transmission | Anechoic masses which envelop in shadow | Composite masses in shape of cyst |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15% | 16.6% | 15.8% | 47.4% |
Fig. 1Different levels of fat necrosis (Derived in accordance with Jorge et al. [6]). a Primary level of fat necrosis indicates fragments of adipose tissue. b Primary level of fat necrosis indicates individual adipocytes. c Medium level of fat necrosis indicates infiltration by histiocytes. d Medium level of fat necrosis indicates conglomeration of RBCs referred to as “myospherulosis”. e Late stage of fat necrosis indicates single multinucleated giant cell. f Late stage of fat necrosis indicates calcifications (are common in late stage of fat necrosis). g Late stage of fat necrosis indicates macrophages containing hemosiderin. h Late stage of fat necrosis indicates calcifications
Fig. 2Craniocaudal mammograms and right breast mediolateral oblique. a and b) show round masses with radiolucent centers at the site of palpable finding. c) Ultrasound of the right breast at site of palpable finding demonstrate two hypoechoic round masses with central echogenicity with associated posterior acoustic shadowing (Derived in accordance with William et al. [19])
Fig. 3Craniocaudal projections and right breast mediolateral oblique. a and b) show a radiolucent lobular mass at site of palpable mass (arrow). c) Targeted ultrasound at site of palpable mass demonstrates a lobular heterogeneous hypoechoic mass with posterior acoustic shadowing. d) Axial T1-weighted fat saturation after gadolinium. e) T2-weighted nonfat saturation, and f) subtraction images that indicate a mass at 11 o’clock in the right breast anteriorly that follows fat signal on all sequences with thin rim enhancement (Derived in accordance with William et al. [19])
Common imaging features of fat necrosis
| MRI | (1) Depending on amount of inflammatory reaction, liquefied fat, and degree of fibrosis, fat necrosis produces a wide spectrum of findings on MRI. Magnetic resonance images correlate well with the histology of fat necrosis. |
| (2) Depending on the intensity of the inflammatory process, it may show enhancement after the administration of IV paramagnetic contrast material. | |
| (3) Lipid cyst, round or oval mass with hypointense T1-weighted signal on fat saturation images are the most common types of appearance. | |
| (4) It is usually isointense to fat elsewhere in the breast. (v) Compared with surrounding fat, “black hole” sign is marked hypointensity on STIR images. | |
| (5) MRI is associated with thin, thick, irregular or spiculated enhancement. | |
| Mammography | The mammographic appearance of fat necrosis includes normal appearance, discrete round or oval radiolucent oil cyst with thin capsule, thickening and deformity of skin and subcutaneous tissue, focal mass, and ill-defined spiculated mass. Oil cysts may be associated with uniform continuous eggshell calcification. There may also be multiple clustered pleomorphic micro-calcifications suspicious of malignancy. The most common mammographic findings are dystrophic calcifications, followed by radiolucent oil cysts. |
| Ultrasound | Common features of fat necrosis on sonography are increased echogenicity of subcutaneous tissue, as an anechoic cyst with posterior acoustic enhancement, hypoechoic mass with posterior acoustic shadowing, solid mass, cyst with internal echoes, normal appearance or cystic mural nodule and architectural distortion |
| CT | (1) Liquefied fat can manifest low attenuation coefficients. |
| (2) Similar to fibroglandular tissue or linear densities resembling fibrous bands, fibrosis has attenuation. | |
| (3) Inflammation enhances followed by contrast injection. | |
| PET-CT | (1) Secondary to presence of metabolically active inflammatory cells, fat necrosis may increase FDG uptake. |
| (2) It is associated with intense activity in the setting of TRAM flap reconstruction. |
Fig. 4A patient who shows a mass in the left breast which follows fat signal on all sequences (arrow). a) Axial T1-weighted nonfat saturation, b) T2-weighted nonfat saturation, c) T1-weighted fat saturation after gadolinium and d) subtraction images (Derived in accordance with William et al. [19])