Purpose: To assess the role of CT in diagnosing and characterizing gastric fatty tumors.
Material and methods: We reviewed the CT scans of 16 patients (8 men, 8 women, mean age 52 years) with gastric fatty tumors (11 lipomas, 3 liposarcomas, 1 angiolipoma, 1 teratoma) examined from 1990 to 1999. The differential diagnosis considered primary and secondary lipomatosis, carcinoma engulfing the perivisceral fat and thus mimicking a liposarcoma, mesenchymal gastric and primary peritoneal tumors.
Results: Lipomas involved the fundus (7/11), the body (3/11), the antrum (1/11). Multifocality was found in one case. Lesions size ranged 25 to 65 mm (mean 35 mm). All the lipomas showed homogeneous structure with negative (-30 -100) HU values. A pseudocapsule was demonstrated in 7/11 cases. No infiltrative growth was demonstrated. The angiolipoma located in the fundus showed a vascular component with strong contrast enhancement. All the liposarcomas were bigger than 10 cm and there was a strong correlation between pathologic specimen and CT findings. The differentiated liposarcomas showed the classic heterogeneous fatty density; on the contrary the myxoid and the pleomorphic types showed an aspecific structure with necrotic/cystic changes, mostly demonstrated in the myxoid type. The teratoma was a solid mass with fatty, solid, necrotic and calcified components.
Conclusion: CT allows the diagnosis and characterization of gastric fatty tumors. The preoperative diagnosis of lipomas plays a major clinical role because it often makes surgery unnecessary.