Sensory and Motor Median Nerve Neuropathy Due to a Deep Giant Hand Lipoma: A Case Report
Ioannis M. Stavrakakis, Vasiliki Georgopoulou, George E. Magarakis, Maria S. Katsafarou

TL;DR
A rare case of hand nerve damage caused by a large lipoma is reported, showing successful recovery after surgery.
Contribution
This case report highlights a unique instance of median nerve neuropathy caused by a giant hand lipoma.
Findings
The patient's symptoms were caused by a giant lipoma compressing the median nerve motor branch.
Surgical removal of the lipoma restored full thumb motion and grip strength.
The unique anatomical relationship between the lipoma and nerve branch is emphasized.
Abstract
Lipomas are the most common soft-tissue tumors in the human body, but their location in the hand is rare. Symptomatic hand lipomas, due to nerve compression, are even rarer. We present a case of median nerve neuropathy as a result of a giant palm lipoma, located on the thenar and hypothenar areas of the hand. The patient had typical symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome, along with compromised thumb motion. Intraoperatively, the recurrent motor branch of the median nerve was sitting on the lipoma under a great tension. This particular location of the motor branch of the median nerve in relation to the lipoma makes this case unique. The tumor was excised protecting the neurovascular structures, and a few weeks later the patient regained full thumb motion, grip strength, and resolution of dysesthesia. Os lipomas são os tumores de partes moles mais comuns no corpo humano, mas sua localização…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPeripheral Nerve Disorders · Musculoskeletal synovial abnormalities and treatments · Orthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation
