Hibernoma
A hibernoma is a benign neoplasm of vestigial brown fat. They were first described under the name 'pseudolipoma' by the German physician H. Merkel in 1906 and the term hibernoma was proposed by the French anatomist Louis Gery in 1914 because of its resemblance to brown fat in hibernating animals.
Signs and symptoms
Patients present with a slow-growing, painless, solitary mass, usually of the subcutaneous tissues. It is much less frequently noted in the intramuscular tissue. It is not uncommon for symptoms to be present for years.Benign neoplasm with brown fat is noted.
Diagnosis
Imaging findings
In general, imaging studies show a well-defined, heterogeneous mass, usually showing a mass which is hypointense to subcutaneous fat on magnetic resonance T1-weight images. Serpentine, thin, low signal bands are often seen throughout the tumor.Pathology findings
From a macroscopic perspective, there is a well-defined, encapsulated or circumscribed mass, showing a soft, yellow tan to deep brown mass. The size ranges from 1 to 27 cm, although the mean is about 10 cm.The tumors histologically resemble brown fat. There are four histologic types recognized, but one is the most frequently seen. There is a background of rich vascularity.
- Lobular type: Variable degrees of differentiation of uniform, round to oval cells with granular eosinophilic cells with prominent borders, alternating with coarsely multivacuolated fat cells. There are usually small centrally placed nuclei without pleomorphism. The cells have large cytoplasmic lipid droplets interspersed throughout.
- Myxoid variant: Loose, basophilic matrix, with thick fibrous septa, and foamy histiocytes
- Lipoma-like variant: Univacuolated lipocytes, with only isolated hibernoma cells
- Spindle cell variant: Spindle cell lipoma combined with hibernoma