Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the Literature

Introduction: A spermatic cord lipoma is found in 20–70% of all inguinal hernia repairs. The clinical picture of an inguinal hernia with bulging and pain but without an actual indirect hernia sac may become manifest in up to 8% of these cases. Missed spermatic cord lipoma can result in recurrence or...

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Main Authors: Ferdinand Köckerling, Christine Schug-Pass
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsurg.2020.00039/full
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spelling doaj-8f9ce4ff0e324989877d4727faf43f532020-11-25T03:45:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Surgery2296-875X2020-07-01710.3389/fsurg.2020.00039547086Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the LiteratureFerdinand KöckerlingChristine Schug-PassIntroduction: A spermatic cord lipoma is found in 20–70% of all inguinal hernia repairs. The clinical picture of an inguinal hernia with bulging and pain but without an actual indirect hernia sac may become manifest in up to 8% of these cases. Missed spermatic cord lipoma can result in recurrence or pseudo-recurrence. This review presents the relevant literature on this topic.Materials and Methods: A systematic search of the available literature was performed in February 2020 using Medline, PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, Embase, Springer Link, and the Cochrane Library, as well as a search of relevant journals and reference lists. Forty-two publications were identified as relevant for this topic.Results: Spermatic cord lipoma seems to originate from preperitoneal fatty tissue within the internal spermatic fascia in topographical proximity to the arteries, veins, lymphatics, nerves, and deferent duct within the spermatic cord. Reliable diagnosis cannot be made clinically, but rather with ultrasound, CT, or MRI. In the absence of a real hernia sac, a spermatic cord lipoma is classified as a lateral inguinal hernia with a defect size <1.5 cm according to the European Hernia Society (EHS LI). Missed or inadequately treated spermatic cord lipoma results in recurrence or pseudo-recurrence. Since spermatic cord lipoma obtains its vascular supply from the preperitoneal space, it can be reduced or resected.Conclusion: Spermatic cord lipoma is a common finding in inguinal hernia repairs and must be properly diagnosed and treated with care respecting the anatomy of the spermatic cord.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsurg.2020.00039/fullinguinal hernialipomarecurrencepseudo-recurrencespermatic cord lipoma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ferdinand Köckerling
Christine Schug-Pass
spellingShingle Ferdinand Köckerling
Christine Schug-Pass
Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the Literature
Frontiers in Surgery
inguinal hernia
lipoma
recurrence
pseudo-recurrence
spermatic cord lipoma
author_facet Ferdinand Köckerling
Christine Schug-Pass
author_sort Ferdinand Köckerling
title Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the Literature
title_short Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the Literature
title_full Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the Literature
title_fullStr Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the Literature
title_full_unstemmed Spermatic Cord Lipoma—A Review of the Literature
title_sort spermatic cord lipoma—a review of the literature
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Surgery
issn 2296-875X
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Introduction: A spermatic cord lipoma is found in 20–70% of all inguinal hernia repairs. The clinical picture of an inguinal hernia with bulging and pain but without an actual indirect hernia sac may become manifest in up to 8% of these cases. Missed spermatic cord lipoma can result in recurrence or pseudo-recurrence. This review presents the relevant literature on this topic.Materials and Methods: A systematic search of the available literature was performed in February 2020 using Medline, PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, Embase, Springer Link, and the Cochrane Library, as well as a search of relevant journals and reference lists. Forty-two publications were identified as relevant for this topic.Results: Spermatic cord lipoma seems to originate from preperitoneal fatty tissue within the internal spermatic fascia in topographical proximity to the arteries, veins, lymphatics, nerves, and deferent duct within the spermatic cord. Reliable diagnosis cannot be made clinically, but rather with ultrasound, CT, or MRI. In the absence of a real hernia sac, a spermatic cord lipoma is classified as a lateral inguinal hernia with a defect size <1.5 cm according to the European Hernia Society (EHS LI). Missed or inadequately treated spermatic cord lipoma results in recurrence or pseudo-recurrence. Since spermatic cord lipoma obtains its vascular supply from the preperitoneal space, it can be reduced or resected.Conclusion: Spermatic cord lipoma is a common finding in inguinal hernia repairs and must be properly diagnosed and treated with care respecting the anatomy of the spermatic cord.
topic inguinal hernia
lipoma
recurrence
pseudo-recurrence
spermatic cord lipoma
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsurg.2020.00039/full
work_keys_str_mv AT ferdinandkockerling spermaticcordlipomaareviewoftheliterature
AT christineschugpass spermaticcordlipomaareviewoftheliterature
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