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Description
A 61-year-old man presented to the local hospital with a 7-day history of epigastric pain, haematemesis, melaena and fatigability. Gastroscopy showed a gastric antral mass with an ulcer (figure 1A, B) and biopsies were negative for malignancy. The patient was transfused 2 units of blood and referred for further management. He was well with stable vital signs and an unremarkable abdominal examination. Repeat gastroscopy (figure 1C, D) and endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) showed a large hyperechoic lesion arising from the antral wall submucosa. Endoscopic biopsy revealed chronic non-specific gastritis and submucosal adipose fragments suggestive of lipoma. CT scan showed a large (8.5×5 cm) submucosal well-encapsulated fat-containing antral lesion with thickened and ulcerated overlying tissue. The antrum was narrowed by the lesion, but there was no proximal gastric dilation (figure 2). The patient underwent laparotomy and enucleation of the lesion with some overlying gastric mucosa (figure 3). The histology confirmed lipoma with areas of focal necrosis. The patient remained well at 9-month follow-up.
Gastric lipomas are rare and account for 5% of all gastrointestinal (GI) lipomas.1 They are most commonly located in the submucosal layer of the antrum and are often asymptomatic, and may be discovered incidentally.1 However, they may present with gastric outlet obstruction, intussusception, massive GI bleeding and, rarely, malignant transformation into liposarcoma.1–3 CT scan is often diagnostic showing well-circumscribed submucosal mass lesion with attenuated fat density2 (figure 2). EUS and endoscopic biopsy are also helpful in establishing a preoperative diagnosis. The treatment is surgical excision either by partial gastrectomy or enucleation.1 Endoscopic resection has been described.3
Learning points
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Gastric lipomas may present with gastric outlet obstruction, massive gastrointestinal bleeding or intussusception.
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CT scan, endoscopic ultrasound and endoscopic biopsy help to establish the diagnosis preoperatively.
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Surgical enucleation is sufficient and can be conducted either laparoscopically or endoscopically.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Dr Jawad BuSubaih, consultant gastroenterologist of King Fahad Hospital, Hofouf, Saudi Arabia for providing figure 1A, B.
Footnotes
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Twitter Follow Abdul-Wahed Meshikhes at @meshikhes
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Contributors MA wrote the initial draft and searched the literature. A-WNM managed the case and wrote the final draft.
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Competing interests None.
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Patient consent Obtained.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.