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The probability of hemangioma disappearing on its own is low, and for hemangiomas, we should adhere to the principle of early detection, early diagnosis, and early diagnosis, and we cannot wait for the waiting period to subside by chance with a fluke attitude, because the longer the hemangioma waits, the larger the area, the more serious the condition, and the greater the difficulty, and some hemangiomas are easy to ulcerate and bleed due to the special location, and once the hemangioma is broken, the wound will not heal for a long time, and it will leave an ugly scar. **Infantile hemangioma can be mediated by ultrasound minimally invasive**, high-frequency electrocoagulation minimally invasive**, etc.
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1) Strawberry-shaped hemangioma (also known as infantile hemangioma, capillary hemangioma): It is formed by superficial telangiectasia, tortuous and tortuous, and the tumor body is often higher than the first surface. Occurs in infants, mostly female.
At birth, you can find ** red spots or small red spots, which gradually grow, and the red color deepens and rises. Strawberry hemangiomas often enlarge at a faster rate than babies in their somatic cells. The tumor has a clear boundary, and it can fade slightly when pressed, and return to red after relaxation.
Strawberry hemangiomas in the growing phase do not resolve on their own. Clinical manifestations in the growth phase: bright red in color, shiny surface, higher than ** surface or enlarged area.
2) Cavernous hemangioma (also known as venous malformation): generally composed of venules and fatty tissue. The shape and texture are sponge-like, so it is called cavernous hemangioma.
Most of them grow in the subcutaneous tissue, but they can also be in the muscles, and a few can be in the bones or internal organs. Subcutaneous cavernous hemangiomas may cause a slight local bulge,** normal,** or blue or purple, and the lump is soft and well-defined. If a cavernous hemangioma grows between deep muscles, it is called an "interscalene hemangioma."
Cavernous hemangiomas do not resolve on their own for life.
3) Mixed hemangioma (mixed hemangioma in 2, often mixed strawberry hemangioma and cavernous hemangioma): at the beginning, most of them are small red spots of different surface sizes, and with the development of surface hemangioma, the appearance is red and blue, and it invades the dermis and subcutaneous tissue at the same time, and the scope of subcutaneous invasion can exceed the surface lesion area, forming a raised mass with irregular shape, mostly on the face and limbs. The invasion is sometimes so widespread that tissues and organs such as the eyes, lips, nose or ears are covered by this dilated vascular tissue, which can cause dysfunction of breathing, eating, vision, and hearing.
Now many places have specialized hemangioma hospitals, generally do not use surgery, surgery is a traditional method, not easy to heal, great harm to the patient, there will be various complications after the operation, so that the patient's body is a great degree of harm, and easy to leave scars and**.
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Communication hemangiomas are common benign tumors in childhood, about 3 4 pediatric hemangiomas are present at birth, and the rest also appear within 1 year of age, and female infants are more common than male infants. Hemangiomas tend to occur on the face and limbs**, affecting the appearance, and can also cause bacterial infection due to trauma, friction, scratching and bleeding. Some hemangiomas grow quickly, slowly, or even disappear on their own.
Parents should closely observe the growth of infantile hemangiomas, do a good job of home care, and grasp the best time to carry out**.
There are five types of hemangiomas that are common in children:
Orange spots are present after birth, the size of the plaques varies, orange-red or light red, not higher than the ** surface, fade when lightly pressed, and the color darkens when crying. Orange spots are more common on the forehead, upper eyelids, and occipital area and usually resolve spontaneously within a few months of life and do not need to be treated.
Erythema nevus is also known as port-wine stain. Immediately after birth, it is a pale red or dark red plaque, which does not fade when pressed, does not rise above the ** surface, is located in the dermis, and is composed of a capillary network. After birth, the erythematous nevus grows proportionally with the growth of the body, but the extent no longer expands.
Erythema does not go away on its own. In addition to affecting the appearance, erythematous nevi generally have no other harm, and can be frozen if necessary**.
Capillary hemangiomas are more common in **, with the occipital, head, face, limbs and back being the most, and many longer than the lips and tongue. Capillary hemangiomas vary in size, from large ones that can occupy most of the face or limbs, to small ones that are only a few millimeters and slightly higher than **. Capillary hemangiomas are generally present after birth, grow rapidly within 6 months, and gradually stop growing after 1 or 2 years of age.
It is aesthetically pleasing and poses a risk of massive bleeding after breakage, so parents should pay close attention to it. If the hemangioma is small, slower-growing, and not in the exposed area, it can resolve on its own when it stops growing. If the hemangioma grows rapidly and seriously affects the aesthetics, it should be carried out immediately**, and isotope dressing and other methods can be used**.
Cavernous hemangiomas can occur in **, subcutaneous tissues, muscles, and even liver, kidneys, etc. The appearance is purple-red, surrounded by tortuous and distended small veins, which are soft and elastic, shrink when squeezed, and recover after decompression. This type of hemangioma grows in size as the baby gets older, sometimes very large and deep, severely damaging the appearance and destroying normal tissue.
Once the diagnosis is confirmed, it should be performed immediately**, with sclerotherapy injection or surgical excision.
Cranoid hemangiomas are more common in the limbs, with many dendritic dilated blood vessels on the surface and around them, tortuous and vine-like, locally** dark red or blue-purple, and sometimes the pulse of the blood vessels can be felt or the bruit of the blood vessels can be heard. For this type of hemangioma, surgery should be performed as soon as possible, and the limb can also be bandaged with elastic bandages to relieve symptoms such as soreness in the limb.
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Hello, hemangiomas are self-limiting, with definite proliferative, stable and regressive phases. According to the literature, some children with hemangiomas will regress, and a small number of them can leave no traces at all, but most of them will leave red spots, called blood spots or angioerythema. However, not all hemangiomas can resolve naturally, and most types of hemangiomas progress rapidly, not only do not resolve on their own, but are extremely destructive.
Therefore, when a child is found to have a hemangioma, he should go to a regular hospital for treatment in time to avoid delays**.
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Some superficial hemangiomas have a certain chance of regression, but not all hemangiomas will regress, and even if they do, it will take three to five years to completely regress. It is recommended to bring your child to the hospital for a check-up and evaluation.
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Hemangioma is a benign disease, generally does not need a special **, regular re-examination can be, infant hemangioma will gradually regress with growth, if it does not subside, you can go to the hospital to consult a doctor.
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Hemangiomas usually start with only a few red dots of varying sizes, or even a single red dot. If the protrusion is normal**, it may be a capillary hemangioma. If it is an abnormal mass such as purple or blue, it may be a cavernous hemangioma.
Some cavernous hemangiomas have relatively shallow symptoms, manifested as uneven heights, varicose swirling blood vessels are faintly visible, showing blue or light purple, and some are relatively deep, and the symptoms are not very obvious, but the mass is compressible, and the size of the volume can change with the change of location. Among them, infantile cranoid hemangioma is relatively rare, common in the head, face, fingers and toes, as well as palms and soles, etc., and the winding blood vessels are faintly visible under the skin, and the pulse of the blood vessels can be felt when touched, and sometimes the sound can be heard, and the mass will shrink when compressed.
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If the hemangioma is small, such as the hemangioma of the vertebral body and the hemangioma of the kidney and liver, it often does not cause significant effects on the body. If the hemangioma is huge, it can seriously endanger the patient's health no matter where it grows. In addition, hemangiomas can also cause infection, ulceration, bleeding and even malignant transformation, which seriously affect the quality of life of patients, and cerebral hemangiomas and arterial hemangiomas are dangerous once they rupture.
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A hemangioma is a benign tumor or congenital malformation that originates in tubular tissue (blood vessels) and is more common at birth or shortly after birth. There are two types: capillary hemangioma and cavernous hemangioma, and the former is more common. Capillary hemangiomas are made up of clusters of thin-walled blood vessels.
Cavernous hemangioma is composed of sinus-like blood vessels, soft as a sponge, dark red, scattered under the mucosa without pedicle, and can extend to the subcutaneous part of the neck, and is blue-purple.
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Below we have summarized several common hemangiomas in infants, hoping to help you increase the number of hemangiomas. Orange spots usually disappear on their own within a few months of birth.
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How old is the child? What color is the tumor? Is there a bulge**?
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Although infantile hemangiomas have the characteristics of self-regression, it is still impossible to judge whether and to what extent they can resolve on their own. The process of natural regression is long, up to several years, and even if it heals spontaneously, there will be local atrophy, pigment changes, and even fibrous fatty plaques, which greatly affect the patient's psychology and social interaction.
Generally, for infantile hemangioma with a mild degree of proliferation, and the lesion is still located in a non-exposed non-functional area, temporary follow-up observation can be carried out, and timely intervention should be considered if the enlargement is rapid.
If the lesion is located in an exposed part or functional area of the body surface, in order to prevent the appearance defect or even dysfunction caused by the incomplete regression of the hemangioma, early intervention should be carried out and actively **.
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Hemangioma is a benign tumor, which can be large or small, and about 40% of children have hemangioma symptoms at birth, and nearly 50% of hemangioma symptoms develop after birth.
Spontaneous regression of partial hemangiomas:
Infantile hemangioma also has a certain growth period, generally lasting 6 to 8 months, if the hemangioma does not continue to grow, it enters the quiescent period, when the hemangioma reaches the maximum, after a period of stability, at the age of 1 to 2 years, some hemangiomas will begin to regress on their own, but the process will continue to 5 to 7 years old, or even longer, even if the hemangioma can regress on its own during this period, it will also leave scars.
Hemangiomas that can resolve on their own are more fortunate and recede quickly, and if they are unlucky, they last for 5-10 years, or worse, they do not regress at all but cause the condition to be severe.
Therefore, recovery from a hemangioma cannot be expected to resolve spontaneously. It is best to test the condition, see the development, and see whether it is necessary to accept ** according to the doctor's judgment, and turn passive into active, which is more responsible for the patient's health.
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Some mothers may find that there are some red patches on the baby's body, which may be small and blood-red, and this may be due to hemangioma. Some of these mothers may have heard others say that hemangiomas will regress on their own as their children get older, and they may not take this matter to heart, so is this statement correct? What happens if a baby has a hemangioma?
Is it true that infantile hemangiomas regress on their own.
Hemangiomas are benign tumors that resolve spontaneously in some people, but most hemangiomas may last a lifetime. Don't be lucky for hemangioma, some parents of children love their children, listen to the misleading of some non-professionals, have been blindly waiting, even if the symptoms of hemangioma spread and the disease is aggravated, they are still blindly waiting, it is recommended to observe more, and the symptoms should be timely**. There are many patients with severe hemangiomas who mistakenly believe that the hemangioma will regress on its own at the initial stage, resulting in a delay in the best time.
Therefore, for hemangiomas, it is necessary to adhere to the principle of early detection, early diagnosis and early diagnosis, and the waiting period cannot be resolved by chance with a fluke attitude.
What to do if your baby has a hemangioma.
1. Observe more. If the size of the hemangioma has not changed, that is to say, there is no sign of growing up, it should not be a big problem, and it will disappear slowly.
2. Mothers should eat lightly. Breastfed babies, if they suffer from hemangioma, mothers should pay attention, can not eat spicy food, diet should be light, because any food that mothers eat will be passed to the baby's body in the form of breast milk, spicy food is not beneficial to the baby's hemangioma**.
3. Pay attention to personal hygiene. Parents should pay attention to the baby's personal hygiene, especially the local hygiene around the hemangioma, so as not to breed bacteria, and the hemangioma, so as not to affect the normal of the baby's hemangioma.
4. Seek medical attention in a timely manner. If it is found that the baby's hemangioma is growing, it is recommended to seek medical attention as soon as possible, in time, there are many methods, including laser method, freezing method, injection method, surgical excision method, etc., according to the specific constitution of the baby, as early as possible to reduce the baby's pain.
In fact, it is not true that infantile hemangiomas will regress on their own, generally speaking, only a part of hemangiomas may regress on their own, and some may always accompany the patient if they are not along, causing great harm to the patient, and this disease is best detected early, once the best time is missed, it may be more difficult, so once this symptom is found, it is necessary to pay more attention and observation.
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Hello, in general, infantile hemangiomas, if there are no other uncomfortable symptoms, will resolve on their own; If there are other uncomfortable symptoms, they will not go away on their own. The specific analysis is as follows:1
Resolves on its own: A hemangioma is usually a benign tumour that occurs on the baby's head, face, neck, etc. If the hemangioma has no other uncomfortable symptoms, it usually does not continue to develop and will regress on its own as the baby grows and develops.
2.Won't go away on its own: If the baby hemangioma has symptoms such as color change and painful compression, it will generally not subside on its own, which does not rule out the risk of hemangioma deterioration, and it is recommended that parents send the baby to the hospital for surgery if necessary.
Parents should pay attention to the care of the baby's postoperative wound to prevent the baby from scratching to avoid wound infection, and also have regular check-ups.
It is recommended to go to the vascular surgery department of a regular hospital or the pediatric vascular department for examination. High-risk hemangiomas should be treated as early as possible**, and vascular malformations should be aggressive**.
Hepatic cavernous hemangioma.
1) Main performance. >>>More
Hemangioma is a benign tumor disease, theoretically there is no danger to life, and there will be no such harm as malignant tumors, but for hemangiomas, especially infantile hemangiomas, it is also extremely harmful >>>More
Hemangiomas mainly have the following hazards: affecting the function of normal tissues and organs, affecting aesthetics, endangering life, inheriting to the next generation, hemangiomas are relatively less harmful to the body, but some will deteriorate or even endanger life, so hemangiomas must be carried out in time.
Pathologic features of hepatic hemangioma.
Hepatic hemangioma can occur alone, or it can occur to more than a dozen, and can occur in both left and right hepatic lobes, but the right hepatic lobe is more common, and a few are diffuse growth, which can occupy most of the liver or even the entire liver. Embryonal vascular hamarts originating from the liver are formed by causing tumor-like hyperplasia under the action of certain factors. The texture of the tumor is soft, the incision surface is honeycomb-shaped, filled with blood, compressible, and shaped like a sponge, so it is called hepatic cavernous hemangioma. >>>More