Impact of Lipoma Size and Depth on Local Anesthetic Volume: Exploring the Efficacy of Diluted Lidocaine for Excision
Yuto Yamamura, Kazuyasu Fujii, Chisa Nakashima, Kazutoshi Nishimura, Atsushi Otsuka

TL;DR
This study shows that diluted lidocaine can effectively provide local anesthesia for lipoma removal, reducing the need for general anesthesia even in larger tumors.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the clinical efficacy of 10-fold diluted lidocaine for lipoma excision and its correlation with tumor size.
Findings
Local anesthesia was used in 86.8% of cases with 10-fold diluted lidocaine.
Anesthetic volume correlated strongly with lipoma size (ρ = 0.666, p < 0.001).
Diluted lidocaine reduced general anesthesia use and maintained analgesic efficacy.
Abstract
Local anesthesia is commonly used in the surgical excision of lipomas. However, concerns regarding anesthetic toxicity and insufficient analgesia may arise in larger or deeper tumors. Tumescent anesthesia using highly diluted lidocaine has been proposed to mitigate these risks, though its clinical utility remains insufficiently studied. In this retrospective observational study, we evaluated the efficacy and safety of 10-fold diluted 1% lidocaine in the excision of 53 lipomas from 38 patients. We also investigated how tumor characteristics, including size and depth, influenced anesthetic volume and the choice of anesthesia (local vs. general). Local anesthesia was used in 86.8% of cases, whereas general anesthesia was typically reserved for deep-seated lipomas. Among cases performed under local anesthesia, total anesthetic volume was positively correlated with lipoma size (ρ = 0.666, p…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBody Contouring and Surgery · Facial Rejuvenation and Surgery Techniques · Surgical Sutures and Adhesives
