2.Anastomosing hemangioma: a case report.
Jianguo YAO ; Hongjia PAN ; Chunhua WANG ; Feng XIAO ; Qinhe FAN ; Weihao JIANG ; Jianqiu XU
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2015;44(2):133-134
4.Current immunohistochemical study of hemangioma.
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2005;40(3):259-261
5.MR Findings of Vascular Masses of the Head and Neck: Differential Diagnosis and Interventional Treatment Planning.
Hyo Heon KIM ; Ik Won KANG ; Kil Woo LEE ; Hong Kil SUH ; Shin Young CHO ; Ku Sun KIM ; Young Soo NO ; Suk Joon OH
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1995;33(2):205-211
PURPOSE: To characterize the MR findings for a differential diagnosis and to make a plan for treatment by interventional technique of the vascular masses with/without hypertrophic feeding vessels of the head and neck. SUBJCETS AND METHODS: Seven patients with vascular masses of the head and neck proved by pathology, angiography, clinical findings were included. Vascular masses included 4 venous malformations, a capillary hemangioma, and a hemangiopericytoma, a hemangioma combined with arteriovenous malformation. 7 patients had MR studies with 1.0T and 1.5T using routine TI-, T2- weighted spin echo sequences, and contrast enhancement. 4 MR angiography, 3 inversion recovery, and 6 contrast angiography were studied from 7 patients RESULTS: All vascular masses demonstrated higher than muscle signal intensity on Tl-weighted images, bright signal intensity on T2-weighted images, and prominent enhancement, except AV hemangioma combined with prominent arteriovenous malformation on postcontrast scan. Three hemangiomas demonstrated distinct serpiginous signal voids. Venous malformations demonstrated venous lakes seen as homogenous regions of high signal intensity and phleboliths seen as low signal foci on images. Inversion recovery was the best pulse sequence for evaluation of the extent of lesion. CONCLUSION: MR findings of the vascular masses of the head and neck are useful in delineating the extent of the disease, differentiating venous malformation or cavernous hemangioma from other hemangiomatous lesions including hypertrophic feeding vessels, and making a plan for treatment by interventional technique also.
Angiography
;
Arteriovenous Malformations
;
Diagnosis, Differential*
;
Head*
;
Hemangioma
;
Hemangioma, Capillary
;
Hemangioma, Cavernous
;
Hemangiopericytoma
;
Humans
;
Lakes
;
Neck*
;
Pathology
8.Hemangioma of the Calcaneus
Key Yong KIM ; Hank Yong JEONG
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1976;11(1):132-135
The hemangioma of bone is a benign lesion that slowly resorbs bones and is defined as a hamartoma. It develops frequently in vertebrae and skull and rare in short tubular bone. A case which occurred in calcaneus is reported here. The patient is 20 year old volley ball player. She had been suffered from intermittent dull pain on left heel and slight swelling for one month. X-ray showed well circumscribed an oat sized radiolucent lesion. Radical curettage and chip bone graft was performed. Pathology confirmed capillary hemangioma by histological examination. At post-operative 3rd month, grafted bone appeared well homogenized with host bone and no pain was complained in daily life.
Avena
;
Calcaneus
;
Curettage
;
Hamartoma
;
Heel
;
Hemangioma
;
Hemangioma, Capillary
;
Humans
;
Pathology
;
Skull
;
Spine
;
Transplants
9.Placental mesenchymal dysplasia: reports of two cases.
Ai-wen CHE ; Xu-dong TAN ; Shu-ping CHEN
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2013;42(4):275-276
Adult
;
Female
;
Hemangioma
;
pathology
;
Humans
;
Mesoderm
;
pathology
;
Placenta
;
pathology
;
Placenta Diseases
;
pathology
;
Pregnancy
;
Young Adult
10.Clinicopathological features of congenital hemangioma: a study of 40 cases.
Dong LIANG ; Bo ZHOU ; Na LI ; Ling Fei KONG ; Qiu Yu LIU ; Yan Zhi DING ; Kuai Lin NIU ; Xiao Shuang ZHU ; Hao Hui ZHU
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2022;51(3):202-206
Objective: To investigate the clinical and pathologic features, diagnosis and differential diagnosis of congenital hemangioma (CH). Methods: Forty cases of CH were diagnosed from January 2017 to December 2020 in Henan Provincial People's Hospital. The clinical and pathological and immunohistochemical data were analyzed, with review of literature. Results: There were 24 male and 16 female patients. The lesions were located in the head, neck (11 cases), limbs (14 cases), and trunk (15 cases). The clinical manifestations were congenital painless plaques or masses, the larger ones protruded on the skin surface, mostly dusky purple or bright red, with surrounding white halos. Under low magnification, the tumor was lobular and well demarcated, composed of neo-microvascular lumen of different sizes. The vascular endothelial cells were cuboidal or hobnail in appearance, forming stellar drainage vessels within the lobules. Extra-medullary hematopoiesis was seen in one case of rapidly involuting CH; there were different number of tortuous and dilated vascular lumen between the lobular structures, and some non-involuting CH cases were vascular malformations, which were devoid of lobulated structures. Immunohistochemistry showed that endothelial cells were strongly positive for CD31, CD34 and ERG, while D2-40 and GLUT-1 were negative. Conclusions: CH is a benign congenital vascular tumor with characteristic lobulated growth and abnormal blood vessels in the stroma. Pathological diagnosis often needs to be differentiated from infantile hemangioma, pyogenic granuloma, kaposiform hemangioendothelioma and vascular malformation.
Endothelial Cells/pathology*
;
Female
;
Hemangioendothelioma/pathology*
;
Hemangioma/pathology*
;
Humans
;
Kasabach-Merritt Syndrome/pathology*
;
Male
;
Sarcoma, Kaposi/pathology*
;
Skin Neoplasms/pathology*