Fat necrosis


Fat necrosis is necrosis affecting fat tissue. The term is well-established in medical terminology despite not denoting a specific pattern of necrosis. Fat necrosis may result from various injuries to adipose tissue, including: physical trauma, enzymatic digestion of adipocytes by lipases, radiation therapy, hypoxia, or inflammation of subcutaneous fat.
The gross appearance of fat necrosis is as an irregular, chalky white area within otherwise normal adipose tissue.

Pathophysiology

Trauma

Traumatic injury of adipose tissue liberates stored fat as well as lipases from adipocytes. The extracellular fat then elicits a swift inflammatory response, attracting macrophages and polymorphonuclear leukocytes which proceed to phagocytose the freed fat. The process eventually leads to fibrosis. The necrotic tissue may eventually form a palpable mass.
Traumatic fat necrosis commonly affects the breast and may resemble a tumour.

Enzymatic digestion

Pancreatic conditions like acute pancreatitis, pancreatic carcinoma, and pancreatic trauma result in liberation of pancreatic lipase which proceeds to digest fat to form free fatty acids which subsequently combine with calcium to form soapy precipitates.
Although the peripancreatic region is the most commonly affected, associated fat necrosis may occur throughout the body in subcutaneous tissue, hand and foot joints, and bone marrow. These extrapancreatic complications are known as pancreatic panniculitis.

Clinical significance

Breast fat necrosis

Causes

Examples of causes include but are not limited to:
Fat necrosis in the breast occurs around 0.6%, this represents 2.75% of lesions that end up being benign. However, 0.8% of fat necrosis occurs from tumors of the breast, 1–9% occurs in breast reduction surgery. Individuals that are high risk include women around the age of 50yrs along with pendulous breasts.