2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0050234
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Canine Lipomas Treated with Steroid Injections: Clinical Findings

Abstract: Lipomas are common benign tumours of fat cells. In most cases, surgical excision is curative and simple to perform; however, such a procedure requires general anaesthesia and may be associated with delayed wound healing, seroma formation and nerve injury in deep and intramuscular tumours. The objective of this study was to evaluate treatment of subcutaneous, subfascial or intermuscular lipomas using intralesional steroid injections in dogs. Fifteen dogs presenting with lipomas were selected for treatment with … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…The cellular and histological features of simple lipomas and infiltrative lipomas are often very similar. A biopsy sample without including adjacent normal tissue may lead to an erroneous diagnosis of simple lipoma (Bergman and others 1994, Lamagna and others 2012). Definitive diagnosis of an infiltrative lipoma is based on finding adipocyte infiltration of muscles or fascia at the time of surgery and the biopsy will also confirm the gross surgical findings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The cellular and histological features of simple lipomas and infiltrative lipomas are often very similar. A biopsy sample without including adjacent normal tissue may lead to an erroneous diagnosis of simple lipoma (Bergman and others 1994, Lamagna and others 2012). Definitive diagnosis of an infiltrative lipoma is based on finding adipocyte infiltration of muscles or fascia at the time of surgery and the biopsy will also confirm the gross surgical findings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CT is a good imaging modality to assess the extent of infiltrative disease as it has excellent spatial resolution and provides cross-sectional images without superimposition (McEntee and others 2001). The adipose tissue in infiltrative lipoma has lower attenuation (typically less than −20 HU), which contrasts well with the surrounding muscle on CT images (Lamagna and others 2012Nakladal and others 2012). Irregular shape of the mass, partial or complete ill-defined margins and the linear hyperattenuating striations relative to the surrounding fat on CT images were considered parameters that favoured a diagnosis of infiltrative lipoma (Spoldi and others 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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