@article{article_759924, title={Incidental thoracic spinal angiolipoma in a young woman presenting with trauma}, journal={Journal of Emergency Medicine Case Reports}, volume={11}, pages={79–81}, year={2020}, DOI={10.33706/jemcr.759924}, author={Canbek, İhsan and Vural, Sevilay and Ak, Hakan}, keywords={Spine, Trauma, Back pain, Angiolipoma}, abstract={Introduction: Spinal angiolipoma is a rare clinical entity and usually presents with clinical signs and symptoms of spinal cord compression. It has two types; non-infiltrating and infiltrating. It is more common in females at the ages of 40-50 and at the mid-thoracic levels. Case report: We discussed an incidentally diagnosed non-infiltrating angiolipoma in the lower thoracic spine level in a 33-year-old female patient who presented to the emergency department with severe low back pain after trauma in this case report. Conclusion: Spinal angiolipoma should not be forgotten in the differential diagnoses of the patients presenting with severe back pain after trauma.}, number={3}, publisher={Acil Tıp Uzmanları Derneği}