Thursday 10 September 2015

46-YEAR-OLD WOMAN WITH BREAST ON HER BACK

A woman had a breast-sized tumour removed from her back which had been growing for more than a decade.

The 46-year-old arrived at a clinic in Dublin with a huge growth on the right-hand side of her back.

Doctors recording the case in the journal BMJ case reports said they examined the 'impressive' mass and found it was firm to the touch, rather than tender.

The woman said it had been growing for 10 years, but had starting growing rapidly in the last three.
Upon measuring the tumour, doctors found it was 19cm in length and 6.7cm wide.

Suspecting it may be a soft tissue cancer known as a sarcoma, doctors immediately carried out an MRI scan.

They found the growth was a benign tumour made up of fat cells, known as a lipoma.
Co-author of the report, Dr Tunde Abdulsalam, who practices in Dublin, told MailOnline this was one of the biggest lipomas he had ever seen.

He said: ‘It is unusual to let it grow that big. Most patients would have it removed sooner for cosmetic reasons.

‘From my clinical experience most lipomas are small in size. And most patients frequently leave it alone because it is relatively stable for years and does not affect bodily function.

‘But in some cases, it can increase in size as a person's BMI increases.'

The increase in size can also indicate the tumour is cancerous, hence why the doctors carried out an MRI and a biopsy immediately to rule this out, he added.

The woman is now on the waiting list to have the growth removed with surgery, where it will be weighed.

Lipomas can occur on any part of the body but frequently occur on the torso and the arms.

They usually occur in people aged 40 to 60 years old and tend to be painless, soft and small.

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