Osteolipoma

Last revised by Joshua Yap on 29 May 2024

Osteolipomas, also known as ossified lipomas, are rare intracranial masses, typically located in the suprasellar cistern, composed of mature adipocytes surrounded by calcified ossification 1. They are a variant of intracranial lipomas which rarely have calcification/ossification elsewhere, with the exception of tubulonodular pericallosal lipomas 1

Osteolipomas are rare and only featured in small series and case reports and thus the true incidence is unknown. Similarly, no demographic data is available. 

Most often these lesions are identified incidentally when the brain is imaged for other reasons 1

Osteolipomas are usually in the suprasellar and interpeduncular cistern, close to the pituitary infundibulum, inferior surface of the hypothalamus, mammillary bodies, and tuber cinereum 1

The mass appears as a rounded lesion with central fat attenuation and peripheral calcification 1

Central fat signal that attenuates on fat-saturated sequences is surrounded by calcification which results in low signal on most sequences and blooming on T2*/SWI sequences 1

No enhancing component is helpful in distinguishing osteolipomas from tumors such as teratomas or craniopharyngiomas.

No treatment is usually required as these lesions are asymptomatic and do not grow 1

Other intracranial lesions with fatty components should be considered, including 1

Cases and figures

  • Case 1a: CT
  • Case 1b: MRI
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