Abstract

A slow-growing mass in the left thigh of a 7-year-old spayed female fox terrier dog was originally diagnosed as an infiltrative lipoma by surgical biopsy. Necropsy findings one year later revealed multiple masses made up of well-differentiated adipocytes in the spleen, liver, lungs and a lymph node. The final histopathological diagnosis of these masses and, in retrospect, for the initial leg mass was well-differentiated liposarcoma. This case illustrates some of the confusion in current nomenclature of fatty tumours. Tumours made up of well-differentiated adipose cells which show no tendency toward invasion of surrounding tissue should be designated lipomas. We suggest that fatty tumours characterized by local tissue invasion and/or metastasis should be classified as liposarcomas. Liposarcomas may be further subdivided into well-differentiated and poorly-differentiated types.

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