Background: Primary (or idiopathic) panniculitis involving the intra-abdominal adipose tissue is rare, and its pathogenesis remains unknown. A case of primary eosinophilic panniculitis that involved the greater omentum of a girl is reported.
Case Presentation: The patient, an 11-year-old girl, complained of dull periumbilical pain and nausea, and radiological examination showed a mass lesion in the abdomino-pelvic cavity. On laparoscopy, a plaque-like, flat mass was seen in the greater omentum, and laparoscopic omental resection was performed. On histopathological examination, the interlobular fibrous septa of omental adipose tissue were widened by inflammatory edema, prominent infiltration of eosinophils, and loose proliferation of myofibroblasts. Dense lymphocytic infiltration was also noted around small veins. Inflammatory changes were mild in the fat lobules, and fat necrosis and infiltration of lipid-laden macrophages were absent. Findings of obliterative phlebitis or arteritis were not seen.
Conclusion: Isolated involvement of the omentum by a panniculitic process is rare, and the pathogenesis of eosinophilic septal panniculitis found in the present case remains unknown, but involvement of a hypersensitivity reaction against some unknown stimuli is presumed, based on the histopathological resemblance of the omental lesions to erythema nodosum or eosinophilic panniculitis of the skin. We should keep in mind the possibility that the omental lesion in this patient is a harbinger of more serious immunological disorders. Careful, long-term follow-up and monitoring of the patient is needed.