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Low-Flow Vascular Malformation Pitfalls: From Clinical Examination to Practical Imaging Evaluation--Part 2, Venous Malformation Mimickers.

AJR. American journal of roentgenology, 2016
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this article is to review the unusual clinical and radiographic features of venous malformations that can give rise to diagnostic confusion.
B. Olivieri   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

A Venous Malformation of the Neck [PDF]

open access: possibleOto-Rhino-Laryngologia Nova, 1998
The most common cause of a mass in the neck, which appears only during the Valsalva manoeuvre, is a laryngocele. Less common are venous malformations in the neck, especially in children. We report a 5-year-old boy with a progressively enlarging tumour in the neck that proved to be a malformation between the common facial vein and external jugular vein.
L.J. Hoeve   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Sclerotherapy for venous malformations

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1995
Of the congenital vascular abnormalities, venous malformations receive little attention and essentially no discussion of treatment. The author describes a 30-year experience with sclerotherapy, which was used for 34 venous malformations. In some cases, these lesions are localized and can be excised, but all the patients in this series had such ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Foam sclerotherapy of venous malformations

Phlebology, 2007
Venous malformations may occur either as localized or segmental lesions. Radiologic imaging defines the extent of involvement but magnetic resonance imaging is the best modality: it gives a bright hypersignal on T2-weighted spin-echo sequences. During a 30-month period, 1427 patients were investigated for venous disorders and 1% were found to have ...
V Cheng, J Bergan
openaire   +3 more sources

Laser Treatment of Venous Malformations

Annals of Plastic Surgery, 2006
Venous malformations (VM) are developmental errors comprised of enlarged dysplastic blood vessels. Clinically they manifest as either a faint blue patch or a soft blue vascular mass. Treatment options include a sclerosing agent (such as alcohol or ethiblock), surgery or laser therapy. A review of the literature concerning VM and laser treatment yielded
Arie Orenstein, Sol Kimel, Oren Sarig
openaire   +3 more sources

Surgical management of venous malformations

Phlebology, 2007
Objectives Among vascular malformations, the predominantly venous malformations represent the majority of cases. They form a clinical entity and therefore need clear concepts concerning diagnosis and treatment. This paper presents an overview of contemporary classification as well as tactics and techniques of treatment.
openaire   +3 more sources

Endovascular Management of Venous Malformations

Phlebology: The Journal of Venous Disease, 2007
Venous malformations are the most common vascular anomalies. When they are superficial and large, they are easily recognized. However, when the malformation is deep or involves normally occurring veins, the diagnosis can be challenging. Extremity varicosities may be the only visible signs of the problem.
openaire   +3 more sources

Distensible Venous Malformation

2019
Vascular lesions are classified into tumours and malformations, and malformations are further classified into high-flow and low-flow lesions depending on the haemodynamic characteristics, and there can be combinations of various lesions. The classification of vascular lesions are detailed in the ISSVA (International Society for the Study of Vascular ...
Stephanie Ming Young   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Capillary-Venous Malformations

2005
Vascular malformations of the central nervous system (CNS) are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the pediatric age group as well as in adults. Despite recent advances in both diagnosis and treatment of these disorders, including the steadfast growth of neurointerventional procedures, vascular malformations of the CNS still account for ...
R. Biancheri   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Arterio-Venous Malformations

2008
Intracranial arterio-venous malformations (AVM) are relatively uncommon, but increasingly recognized lesions that can cause serious neurological symptoms or death. Although AVM can initially present with hemorrhages or seizures, an increasing number is detected before symptomatic bleeding due to the recently developed imaging techniques.
Markus W. Gross, Rita Engenhart-Cabillic
openaire   +2 more sources

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