Identification of the severity of PS using the proposed classification system provided an accurate study of each patient and enabled better planning for the surgical correction of functional and aesthetic deformities.
The classification of lipoabdominoplasty indications offers good options for treatment of the abdominal region. Lipoplasty, selective undermining, and maintenance of Scarpa's fascia help reduce surgical trauma that is the main factor affecting hematoma and necrosis rates. The learning curve for these classifications is fast because the described procedures are already familiar to most plastic surgeons.
Lipomas are benign tumors composed of mature fat, usually encapsulated. A literature review showed that the vast majority of lipomas are small, weighing only a few grams, and grow slowly. According to Hawary et al. (Ann Saudi Med 19(2):174-176, 1999) a giant breast lipoma is characterized by a lesion of at least 5 cm in one dimension and weighs more than 500 g. We present a rare case of a giant breast lipoma with slow growth over 22 years that compromised the entire hemithorax through the right iliac fossa. A 49-year-old woman was referred to our plastic surgery unit because of complaints of severe breast asymmetry due to an enormous mass in the right breast. Twenty-two years earlier she had noticed a soft, mobile, nonpulsatile mass in the inferior quadrant of her right breast. She did not look for medical treatment for all those years for fear of it being cancer. Ultrasound suggested a lipomatous lesion. Open mass biopsy revealed lipoma. The patient underwent a whole mass resection, reconstruction with a parenchymal cross flap, and left breast symmetrization with an inverted T technique. An excellent result with a high degree of patient satisfaction was achieved with the procedure. Parenchymal cross flaps seem to be an option in these situations.
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