CASE 13555 Published on 26.04.2016

Lipoma arborescens of the subdeltoid bursa combined with supraspinatus tendon tear

Section

Musculoskeletal system

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Meltem Özdemir, Aynur Turan, Alper Dilli

Dışkapı Training and Research Hospital,
Department of Radiology,
Ankara, Turkey
Email:meltemgu@yahoo.com
Patient

51 years, male

Categories
Area of Interest Musculoskeletal joint ; Imaging Technique MR
Clinical History
A 51-year-old man presented with a modest intermittent pain in his left shoulder for 4 months. On examination, he had full active range of motion in his shoulder.
Imaging Findings
The plain radiograph of the shoulder showed no evidence of fracture, dislocation or mass lesion. There were glenohumeral and acromioclavicular degenerative changes.
MRI of the shoulder was performed for further evaluation. There was a distension of subdeltoid-subacromial bursa and subscapular recess. Within the distended bursa, there were multiple villous projections having isointensity with subcutaneous fat on all pulse sequences and were visualized as dark lesions with fat suppression, consistent with lipoma arborescens (LA) (Fig. 1-3). MRI revealed a bursal-sided supraspinatus partial tear associated with small degenerative cysts near the insertion site of supraspinatus tendon onto the greater tuberosity (Fig. 4). Subscapular, supraspinatus, and infraspinatus tendinosis and degenerative changes of glenohumeral and acromioclavicular joints were also noted.
Discussion
LA is a rare benign intra-articular lesion with an unknown aetiology. It is characterized by lipomatous proliferation of the synovium in which the subsynovial tissue is replaced by mature adipocytes. It most commonly involves the knee joint, but other locations, including the shoulder, elbow, wrist, and hip, have been reported [1]. Multiple affected joints have also been observed [2]. Subdeltoid bursa is a rare location for LA, and only a few cases have been reported in the literature [1, 3].
Clinically it usually presents as joint swelling, pain, limitation in range of motion, and recurrent effusions [4]. LA was frequently a histological diagnosis, but currently MRI alone is often sufficient to make the diagnosis. The MRI appearance of LA corresponds to the fatty proliferation of the synovial lesion, which enables a specific diagnosis to be made. The subsynovial components of the lesion show high signal intensity similar to subcutaneous fat on T1 and T2-weighted images and are of low signal intensity on the fat-suppressed and STIR sequences. The lesion does not enhance following intravenous administration of contrast medium. The differential diagnosis of LA should include other diffuse pathology of the synovium such as villonodular pigmented synovitis, synovial chondromatosis, synovial haemangioma and rheumatoid arthritis. All these lesions might show fatty areas within the lesion but the MRI appearance of fatty synovial proliferation without other signal intensities within the lesion allows a specific preoperative diagnosis by MRI for LA [5].
Kim MH et al. [1] have pointed out that most published cases of the LA in the subdeltoid bursa were associated with rotator cuff tears and that LA in subdeltoid space might create a rotator cuff tear–prone environment. They recommend paying extra attention to the radiologic and arthroscopic characteristics of the LA in the evaluation and treatment of rotator cuff tears.
Treatment of LA is open or arthroscopic synovectomy. Recurrence of the lesions following synovectomy is uncommon [4].
Differential Diagnosis List
Lipoma arborescens of the subdeltoid bursa, supraspinatus tendon tear
Villonodular pigmented synovitis
Synovial chondromatosis
Synovial haemangioma
Final Diagnosis
Lipoma arborescens of the subdeltoid bursa, supraspinatus tendon tear
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/13555
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.13555
ISSN: 1563-4086
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