- Lipohypertrophy
Lipohypertrophy is a medical term that refers to a lump under theskin caused by accumulation of extra fat at the site of manysubcutaneous injection s ofinsulin . It may be unsightly, and may change the timing or completeness of insulin action. It is a common, minor,chronic complication of diabetes mellitus .Typical injection site hypertrophy is several inches or cm across, smoothly rounded, and somewhat firmer than ordinary subcutaneous fat. There may be some
scar tissue as well, but the major component isadipose tissue , as insulin exerts a hypertrophic effect adipose cells. To avoid lipohypertrophy, persons withdiabetes mellitus who inject insulin daily for an extended period of time are advised to "rotate" their injections among several areas (usually upper, outer arms, outer thighs, abdomen below and around theumbilicus , and the upper parts of the buttocks. Rotation charts to aid avoidance of lipohypertrophy are often provided as part ofdiabetes education .Lipohypertrophy usually will gradually disappear over months if injections in the area are avoided.
It is a common misconception that the lump is largely scar tissue, as injection site hypertrophy is much rarer and milder with injections of other hormones and medications which lack the specific ability of insulin to stimulate adipose hypertrophy.
In a sense, the "opposite" of injection site lipohypertrophy is injection site
lipoatrophy , in which the subcutaneous fat around an injected area "melts away" over a few weeks or months, leaving unsightly, well-demarcated depressions in the skin. The mechanism of this local lipoatrophy is not understood and may involve autoimmunity or local inflammation.
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