A significant number of lipomas will have prominent non-adipose areas and will demonstrate an imaging appearance traditionally ascribed to well-differentiated liposarcoma. Features that suggest malignancy include increased patient age, large lesion size, presence of thick septa, presence of nodular and/or globular or non-adipose mass-like areas, and decreased percentage of fat composition.
Longer follow-up is necessary, and biomechanical and finite element studies are needed to show long-term efficacy of this technique, however, early results indicate that such a construct is feasible. Furthermore, depending on the general medical condition of the patient, immediate postoperative weight bearing is possible and reasonable.
Findings of a mass that on MR images shows a perilesional fat rind, the signal intensity of fluid, and an increased signal in the adjacent muscle on T2-weighted or fluid-sensitive MR sequences are strongly suggestive of intramuscular myxoma. The degree of lesion enhancement varies but is most frequently intense and heterogeneous. Although the recognition of these features likely will not obviate biopsy of any individual lesion, it will allow more accurate prebiopsy diagnosis and preoperative planning.
ObjectivesThe clinical utility of routine cross sectional imaging of the
abdomen and pelvis in the screening and surveillance of patients
with primary soft-tissue sarcoma of the extremities for metastatic
disease is controversial, based on its questionable yield paired
with concerns regarding the risks of radiation exposure, cost, and
morbidity resulting from false positive findings.MethodsThrough retrospective review of 140 patients of all ages (mean
53 years; 2 to 88) diagnosed with soft-tissue sarcoma of the extremity
with a mean follow-up of 33 months (0 to 291), we sought to determine
the overall incidence of isolated abdominopelvic metastases, their
temporal relationship to chest involvement, the rate of false positives, and
to identify disparate rates of metastases based on sarcoma subtype.ResultsA total of four patients (2.9%) exhibited isolated abdominopelvic
metastatic disease during the surveillance period. In all cases
of concomitant chest and abdominopelvic disease, chest involvement
preceded abominopelvic involvement. There was a significant false
positive rate requiring invasive workup.ConclusionsIn the setting of a relative paucity of evidence concerning a
rare disease process and in difference to recently published investigations,
we add a clinical cohort not supportive of routine cross sectional
imaging of the abdomen and pelvis.Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2015;4:45–9.
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