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Hello, the hemangioma on the ** is still relatively good**, the hemangioma is a symptom caused by the abnormal expansion of the end of the capillaries, and the hemangioma is an abnormal malformation. According to the type, hemangiomas are classified as capillary, spongiar, vine-like, and mixed. If there is a hemangioma, it is necessary to go to the hospital for further diagnosis, and the symptoms can be actively treated**, which can be laser or freezing.
With subcutaneous triamcinolone acetonide, oral itraconazole can improve better.
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There are many types of hemangiomas, strawberry hemangiomas, cavernous hemangiomas, mixed hemangiomas, cranoid hemangiomas, etc. For example: strawberry hemangioma, color:
Strawberry-shaped hemangiomas are usually found at birth, or shortly after birth, and are mostly found to be small red spots, which gradually increase as the baby grows.
Higher than**: Strawberry-shaped hemangioma can occur in any part of the human body, among which the head and face are the most common, and the boundary of the onset is very clear, and it will be higher than **.
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Hemangioma is a benign lesion, that is, a local vascular malformation that spreads and becomes larger. Some will also have unlimited local redness, which looks like a birthmark in appearance. This is a benign lesion, sometimes you have pain, sometimes you don't, and there is usually not much of a problem.
If you don't, it won't affect your lifespan, and if you feel that it affects your aesthetics, it is recommended that you go to the hospital for laser or surgery.
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Hemangioma is a congenital benign tumor or vascular malformation formed by the proliferation of angioblasts during the embryonic period, which is common in ** and soft tissues, and is more common at birth or shortly after birth. The residual embryonic angioblasts, active endothelioid germ, invade adjacent tissues to form endothelial cords, which are connected to the remaining blood vessels after catheterization to form hemangiomas, and the intratumoral blood vessels are self-contained and not connected to the surrounding blood vessels. Hemangiomas can occur throughout the body, with oral and maxillofacial hemangiomas accounting for 60% of total hemangiomas, followed by the trunk (25%) and extremities (15%).
Most of them occur on the face**, subcutaneous tissues, oral mucosa, such as the tongue, lips, floor of the mouth, etc., and a few occur in the jaw or deep tissues. It is more common in women, and the male-to-female ratio is about 1:3 1 4.
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Hemangiomas are congenital benign tumors or vascular malformations that are formed by the proliferation of angioblasts during the embryonic period, and are commonly found in the infants at birth or shortly after birth. According to the classification of histological structure and clinical manifestations, it is divided into: (1) capillary hemangioma
including strawberry hemangioma, port-wine stains; (2) cavernous hemangioma; (3) Cranoid hemangioma; (4) Mixed hemangioma.
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Hello! The surface color of hemangioma is mostly dark red, light red, blue purple, colorless, dark red and black, and the surface color of different types of hemangiomas is also different, such as bright red nevus (red birthmark) is mainly dark red or light red, bright red nevus belongs to the category of microvenous malformations, cavernous hemangioma is also divided into superficial and deep, the superficial type is mainly blue and purple, and the surface color of the deep type is normal.
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Hemangiomas often appear as red patches in the early stages, and as the disease progresses over time, the spots slowly merge into patches, and finally bulge into a mass. Hemangiomas generally grow within one year of age, showing changes in color, area, and volume, especially in three to six months, which is medically called the rapid growth phase. After one year of age, the hemangioma enters the regression phase, and the condition may improve slowly over time.
Therefore, in terms of **, it is active within one year of age, and after more than one year old, it is reduced according to the condition, and even observation-based.
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There are many types of hemangiomas, and patients often confuse bright red nevi with hemangioma, bright red nevus is not prominent**, it is light red and pink, and the area will expand and deepen with age; Hemangiomas, on the other hand, protrude**, start as small red spots and grow rapidly after that.
Bright red nevus: also known as microvenous malformation or wine-like nevus, manifested as one or several dark red or red patches, with irregular edges, not high above the skin surface, easy to fade when pressed, the head and neck are more common, often appear at birth, and can increase as the human body grows.
Strawberry-shaped hemangioma: presents as one or more red, soft, lobulated tumors, which do not fade under pressure, tend to occur on the head and neck, usually do not appear at birth, but appear within a few weeks of birth, enlarge within a few months, grow rapidly, and even reach several centimeters.
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Hemangioma is a neoplastic disease that is differentiated as benign or malignant.
Benign hemangioma: caused by abnormal proliferation of vascular endothelial cells due to the aging of the human body, usually without **, if it affects the aesthetics, surgery or laser removal can be considered.
Malignant hemangioma: This disease is rare in hemangiomas, most of the hemangiomas are benign, if the diagnosis is malignant hemangioma, it is necessary to go to the oncology department of the hospital in time, and if necessary, surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy**. Postoperative survival rate: about 60%.
Multiple populations: infants and young children under 4 years old, middle-aged and elderly people over 40 years old. 5 It can also occur in 39-year-old children, adolescents, and middle-aged people, but the incidence is small.
Hemangioma Symptoms:
1. If it is a benign tumor, it will generally form a soft mass through **, which is locally cherry-red bulge, with a clear boundary, and can move with the movement of the surface ** without tenderness.
2. If it is a malignant hemangioma, it usually grows rapidly, the boundary is not clear, a few are tender, and it can grow rapidly in a short time, usually 1 10mm a week.
If you experience any of the above symptoms, it is recommended to seek medical attention as soon as possible.
Wishing you good health!
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The appearance is like a dark red strawberry, which is higher than ** and soft to the touch. 2. Cavernous hemangioma: blue-purple, soft mass, soft when pressed, compressible, and recovered after release.
3. Cranoid hemangioma: tortuous and vine-like, local ** dark red or blue-purple, sometimes you can feel the pulse of the blood vessels or hear the bruits of the blood vessels.
Question 2: What does cavernous hemangioma look like? Cavernous hemangiomas often occur in obvious areas such as the head, face, and neck, followed by the limbs, trunk, and other parts.
In addition to being commonly found in the subcutaneous tissues, it can sometimes be seen to occur under the mucosa of patients, and some patients can occur in muscles, bones, internal organs and other organs. Most patients can be found at birth, and some may have an insidious onset, making it difficult to accurately determine the exact time of onset. Cavernous hemangiomas can also occur in the patient's muscle tissue, and this type is called interscalene hemangioma, with the quadriceps muscle most commonly involved, which is easily misdiagnosed.
Question 6: Is ** a hemangioma? What are they?
Hello friend. Hemangioma ** Method: Surgical excision; Frozen**; Radiation & Isotopes**; Hardener**; Laser**; Copper needle for hemangioma**.
It is recommended to go to the ** department of a regular hospital for treatment.
Question 7: Take a look**, is it a hemangioma**, no** it's not good for you to judge. If you do a good job, let's go to Changfeng for a check-up, see if it is a source teaser or hemangioma, and check it out more assured. Fengtai there.
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Hemangioma is a common congenital and vascular disease, about 80% of which are congenital, and the incidence of oral and maxillofacial hemangiomas accounts for 60% of the whole body, most of which occur in the face**, subcutaneous tissues and oral mucosa, such as the bottom of the lip and tongue. It not only has a blind impact on people's appearance, but also poses a threat to people's health, so if you have a hemangioma, you must be in time.
Hemangioma refers to a benign tumor that occurs in vascular tissue, which is formed due to the misartery and neoplasia of vascular tissue. It is divided into two types: primary and secondary, of which primary accounts for 75% and secondary accounts for about 25%. Secondary forms are mostly found in infancy, with a few occurring in adulthood,** which is not well understood.
Primary, i.e., congenital viviparity, is formed by the proliferation of the vascular network in the human embryonic stage, which is present at birth, and can be asymptomatic when the hemangioma is small. Hemangiomas can occur in various parts of the body, on the face and exposed parts of the limbs, and can affect the appearance. It compresses and destroys the function and morphology of surrounding tissues and organs to varying degrees, affecting the growth and development of the human body.
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Hemangioma is a common benign tumor or vascular malformation, which is caused by vascular hyperplasia, commonly longer than soft tissues such as blood vessels and internal organs, and is also diverse, and there are many types of hemangioma, so in general, hemangioma is not dangerous, because the greatest possibility is the rupture of blood vessels leading to bleeding. If it is a capillary hemangioma or a disease that is not very serious, and there is no rupture and bleeding of the hemangioma in the important organs, it will not have a particularly big impact on the human body, and the positive ** can control the bleeding. If it is an abdominal aortic hemangioma or an aortic dissection hemangioma, once it ruptures and bleeds, hemorrhagic shock will occur in a short period of time, which can be life-threatening.
If the hemangioma occurs in the brain, rupture and hemorrhage will cause cerebral hemorrhage, affect the movement of the patient's limbs and even leave sequelae, and some patients will occur in the center of life, which will also endanger the patient's life. If a hemangioma is found to have a special site, it needs to be actively treated, including surgery, conservative, surgery, which is mainly divided into open surgery and interventional surgery, and it is necessary to decide which method according to the specific condition of the patient.
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Analysis: Tumors that develop from vascular tissue are called hemangiomas, and 80% of them are congenital. Hemangiomas are benign, grow slowly, and rarely become malignant.
Capillary hemangioma: It is formed by superficial telangiectasia, tortuous, and circuitous. Hemangiomas are more common in babies born (about 1 3) or shortly after birth (within 1 month).
It originates from residual embryonic vascular blasts. Its histopathological characteristics are that the tumor is rich in proliferative vascular endothelial cells, and there are angioblasts and mast cell aggregation. Hemangiomas occurring in the oral and maxillofacial areas account for about 60% of systemic hemangiomas, most of which occur in the face, neck**, subcutaneous tissue, and very few in the oral mucosa.
Deep and intramaxillary hemangiomas are currently considered to be vascular malformations. Red spots or small red spots can be found at birth, which gradually grow, and the red color deepens and rises. Capillary hemangiomas often grow faster than infants.
The tumor has a clear boundary, and it can fade slightly when pressed, and return to red after relaxation. It can be frozen** or surgically removed, or x-rays**. Cavernous hemangioma:
It is usually made up of venules and adipose tissue. Its shape and texture resemble a sponge, so it is called a 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 hemangioma may cause a slight local bulge,** normal,** or a bluish-purple color, and the lump is soft and clear. **Ansosectomy should be performed as soon as possible. Small cavernous hemangiomas may also be injected with a local hardener (eg, sodium cod liver oleate 5%).
Suggestions: Hemangioma is a relatively common vascular disease, mostly congenital, generally born at birth. The reasons for it are complex, and there is no accurate statement at present, and the generally accepted causes are divided into two categories as follows:
1. At present, most scholars believe that during the development of human embryos, especially in the early stage of vascular tissue differentiation, due to the small-scale misartization of their control gene segments, the differentiation of tissues in specific parts is abnormal, and hemangioma develops. 2. Some scholars believe that in the early embryonic stage (8 December), the embryonic tissue suffers mechanical damage, and local tissue hemorrhage causes some hematopoietic stem cells to be distributed to other embryonic characteristic cells, and some of them differentiate into angioids and eventually form hemangiomas. The cause of hemangioma is different for each patient, and although all of them are congenital, not all hemangiomas are caused by one cause, and can only be known after a comprehensive examination at a regular plastic surgery hospital.
**Methods: Surgical excision; Frozen**; Radiation & Isotopes**; Hardener**; Laser**; Copper needle for hemangioma**.
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Hemangioma is a congenital disease, because the mother's heart and liver frequency are out of balance due to blood fever and fetal fever within 45 days of first pregnancy, resulting in fetal local telangiectasia and arterial and venous vascular malformations; At the same time, active factors are produced to promote the proliferation of malformed blood vessel walls, resulting in the occurrence of various hemangiomas.
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Surgery**, generally not**, but also**possible.
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The formation of hemangiomas is not well defined**, but studies have suggested that progesterone or chorionic puncture during pregnancy, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, and low birth weight of the infant may be associated with the formation of hemangiomas. It is believed that hemangioma is a small area of tissue differentiation in the control gene segment during the development of human embryos, especially in the early stage of vascular tissue differentiation, resulting in abnormal tissue differentiation in specific parts and developing into hemangioma. In the early embryonic period (8 to 12 months), the embryonic tissue suffers mechanical damage, and local tissue hemorrhage causes some hematopoietic stem cells to be distributed into other embryonal cells, and some of them differentiate into angioids, and eventually form hemangiomas.
Hemangioma is a congenital benign tumor or vascular malformation, mostly seen at birth or shortly after birth of the baby, it originates from the residual embryonic angioblasts, and the hemangiomas that occur in the oral and maxillofacial areas account for 60% of the hemangiomas in the whole body, most of which occur in the face**, subcutaneous tissues and oral mucosa, such as tongue, lips, floor of the mouth and other tissues, and a few occur in the inner or deep tissues of the jaw. >>>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
Capillary hemangioma is a type of hemangioma, which is more common and belongs to vascular malformations. It can be divided into neonatal nevus, port-wine spots, spider nevi, strawberry capillary hemangioma, familial hemorrhagic telangiectasia, granuloma hemangioma. The clinical manifestations are as follows: >>>More
Hemangioma is formed by the continuous proliferation and telangiectasia of capillary endothelial cells due to the impaired development of blood vessels in the embryonic stage. Vascular malformations are formed due to congenital malformations of vascular development, resulting in flexion and dilation of local veins and lymphatic vessels. >>>More
Hemangiomas appear within 1 to 3 months of life, and the typical clinical presentation is that only a small red papule is initially observed. Specifically, it is divided into proliferative phase, quiescent phase, and regression phase. Some hemangiomas do not completely resolve, and vascular malformations are present at birth and may appear as red plaques, pale red or bright red well-defined masses, and masses. >>>More