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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rapidly involuting congenital
hemangioma
(RICH) is a recently recognized entity in which the vascular tumor is fully developed at birth and undergoes rapid involution. Angiographic findings in two infants with congenital
hemangioma
are reported and compared with a more common postnatal infantile
hemangioma
and a congenital infantile fibrosarcoma. Congenital hemangiomas differed from infantile hemangiomas angiographically by inhomogeneous parenchymal staining, large and irregular feeding arteries in disorganized patterns, arterial aneurysms, direct arteriovenous shunts, and intravascular thrombi. Both infants had clinical evidence of a high-output
cardiac failure
and intralesional bleeding. This congenital high-flow vascular tumor is difficult to distinguish angiographically from arteriovenous malformation and congenital infantile fibrosarcoma.
...
PMID:Angiographic features of rapidly involuting congenital hemangioma (RICH). 1249 30
With a cavernous
hemangioma
the vascular space does not form an anastomosis, and the blood flow is slow. In contrast, several atypical hemangiomas, including those with shunt formation, have been recently recognized. We report here two extreme cases of atypical
hemangioma
with severe clinical symptoms due to shunts. In the first case, hemangiomatosis of the entire liver with arteriovenous shunt was treated by embolization of the hepatic artery with as many as 82 steel coils to control high-output
heart failure
. Although the effect of the treatment was late, the patient is free from
heart failure
despite a remnant arteriovenous shunt 12 years after treatment. In the second case, an atypical
hemangioma
in the posterior segment with arterioportal and portosystemic shunt was treated by ligation of the right hepatic artery and the portal vein branch. The patient died of massive bleeding from a deep duodenal ulcer that penetrated the hepatic artery 6 years after treatment. The second case should have been curatively treated only by liver transplantation. It should be noted that there are atypical hemangiomas with shunt that are difficult to treat and cause fatal clinical symptoms and complications.
...
PMID:Atypical liver hemangioma with shunt: long-term follow-up. 1265 11
Hepatic hemangioendothelioma (HE) is a tumor that presents in infancy and toddler. It manifests hepatomegaly, abdominal mass, jaundice, abdominal distention, or high output
cardiac failure
. We reviewed patients with HE in our hospital in the past 15 years (from July 1986 to June 2001). The diagnosis was made by the histology specimen or various imaging studies. There were thirteen patients (9 males, 4 females) enrolled in our study. Their ages ranged from neonate to 2 years old. The common clinical manifestations included abdominal distention (53%), congestive heart failure (38.5%), abdominal mass (30.8%), jaundice (30.8%), and skin
hemangioma
(23.1%). Nine patients had serum alanine aminotransferase examination and were abnormal in 2. Anemia was noted in 7 of 13 (53.8%) patients, thrombocytopenia and hyperconsumptive coagulopathy were found in 4 and 5 patients, respectively. Serum alpha-fetoprotein was elevated in 4 of 7 patients. Abdominal ultrasonography (n = 13) showed heterogeneous and hypoechoic lesions in the liver. Computed tomography (n = 11) revealed central hypointensity with peripheral enhancement after contrast of the liver masses. Magnetic resonance imaging studies of the hepatic masses (n = 3) showed decreased signal intensity on T1 images and high signal intensity on T2. Most patients were treated with steroid. Other management included interferon, chemotherapy, embolization and/or surgery. Four patients were managed conservatively. Among the other nine patients, four patients died of sepsis, hepatic failure, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy or tumor rupture with hemorrhagic shock. HE appears to be a histologically benign tumor but may have a poor outcome because of complications. For its management, steroid is a first-line medication. Other methods of treatment were interferon, hepatic artery embolization, chemotherapy and surgery. Long term follow up is needed for the evaluation of treatment response.
...
PMID:Hepatic hemangioendothelioma in children: analysis of thirteen cases. 1280 Mar 77
OBJECTIVE: To describe a case of a congenital hepatic
hemangioma
treated with surgery. METHODS: We report the case of a 6-day-old boy who presented a giant hepatic
hemangioma
, and describe its evolution. RESULTS: The child developed hemodynamic instability secondary to consumption coagulopathy and respiratory failure. The image studies were inconclusive. He was submitted to surgery with complete resection of the tumor. Pathology confirmed it was
hemangioma
. The child was discharged after 15 days and is well, without symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Hepatic hemangiomas should be treated conservatively, with surgery reserved for intractable
cardiac failure
and/or refractory consumptive coagulopaty.
...
PMID:[Hepatic hemangioma] 1464 7
Haemangiomas can be indicators or clue signs for serious syndromes. Although less well known than those related to vascular malformations, there are some syndromes of important diagnostic value that are associated with haemangomias. Early recognition of problematic haemangiomas, together with a prompt intervention, may help to minimise their future morbidity. Neonatal haemangiomas warrant a special follow-up, since their growth pattern might be unpredictable at such an early age. Several clinical presentations are relevant because of their risk of syndromic association: cervicofacial haemangiomas, especially the extensive ones, may be markers for severe dysmorphic conditions like the PHACE(S) syndrome. Those distributed in the beard area are occasionally associated with haemangiomas of the airway. Lumbosacral haemangiomas usually hide an underlying spinal dysraphism or anorectal and urogenital anomalies. Multiple cutaneous haemangiomas may be a sign of visceral haemangiomatosis, most often hepatic, which becomes complicated by
cardiac insufficiency
or thyroid disease. Finally, there are two vascular neoplasms of rapid and invasive growth - kaposiform haemangioendothelioma and angioblastoma or tufted
angioma
- which, unlike infantile
haemangioma
, are markers for the Kasabach-Merritt syndrome.
...
PMID:[Vascular tumors as syndromic indicators]. 1514 10
The differentiation of haemangiomas and vascular malformations is histological, clinical and prognostic. Although the majority of haemangiomas evolve towards spontaneous resolution, as many as 10% of cases can develop complications with ulceration, pain and haemorrhaging. Besides, the localisation of haemangiomas in the head and neck, next to vital structures, can compromise their functions. Hence, compression of the airway might be a vital emergency. Periorbital haemangiomas can give rise to amblyopia due to sensory deprivation or due to a restrictive strabismus. Lumbosacral haemangiomas must be studied with Nuclear Magnetic Resonance because of their frequent association with alterations in the midline at the level of the spine, anus, genitals or kidneys. Amongst visceral haemangiomas, hepatic haemangiomas are the most serious due to their association with congestive
cardiac insufficiency
. The association of extensive facial haemangiomas with anomalies of the central nervous system, vascular, cardiac, ocular and sternal anomalies, is denominated PHACE syndrome and is frequently complicated by mental deficiency, convulsions or ictus. Vascular malformations of trigeminal localisation are associated in up to 15% of cases with glaucoma or choroidal or leptomeningeal haemangiomas (Sturge-Weber syndrome). Combined vascular malformations localised in the extremities can become complicated with thrombophlebitis, regional osteolysis and even distant thromboembolisms (Klippel-Treneaunay Syndrome). On the other hand, there is a coagulopathy due to consumption (Kassabach-Merrit Syndrome) that can complicate some vascular tumours such as the Kaposiform haemangioendothelioma and the tufted
angioma
. Finally, the complications of the treatments employed are reviewed.
...
PMID:[Complications in the evolution of haemangiomas and vascular malformations]. 1514 12
Miliary neonatal hemangiomatosis is a rare, life-threatening condition associated with cutaneous and multiorgan involvement. We report two infants with this condition who had fulminant
cardiac failure
and cardiac septal hypertrophy. The first was a 5-day-old boy who presented with increasing numbers of cutaneous hemangiomata associated with worsening
cardiac failure
. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed extensive hepatic
hemangioma
. Despite treatment with systemic corticosteroids and subcutaneous interferon alfa-2b his disease progressed. Hepatic artery embolization was unsuccessful. The infant died of congestive cardiac failure at 6 weeks of age. Postmortem examination showed a massively enlarged cardiac interventricular septum and biventricular hypertrophy. The second patient was a 1-week-old girl who also had cutaneous
hemangioma
and cardiac decompensation. MRI showed extensive intrahepatic involvement. She was treated early with corticosteroids and interferon alpha, which resulted in involution of the cutaneous and hepatic lesions. Cardiac septal hypertrophy did not persist at late follow-up, and the association of miliary neonatal hemangiomatosis and cardiac septal hypertrophy has not yet been established.
...
PMID:Miliary neonatal hemangiomatosis with fulminant heart failure and cardiac septal hypertrophy in two infants. 1528 93
Although the majority of hemangiomas of infancy undergo an uncomplicated, predictable course of proliferation followed by involution, a subset of patients sustain a more fastidious course. These include hemangiomas that, at least during part of their life cycle, have a high flow (arterial) component.
Hemangiomas
with high flow are most frequently located in the liver. These lesions can lead to significant morbidity, with high output
cardiac failure
. We have identified nonhepatic hemangiomas that have an apparent propensity to develop a high flow element--the parotid, upper arm, scalp, and rarely the upper lip--and present our experience in this report. These lesions appear to behave as transiently "arterialized" hemangiomas.
...
PMID:Transiently arterialized hemangiomas: relevant clinical and cardiac issues. 1562 61
Intracardiac
haemangioma
is a very rare primary benign tumour. A 20 year old female patient, with no significant previous medical history, presented to the emergency department with cardiovascular collapse and vague abdominal pains, with no peripheral signs of
cardiac failure
. The electrocardiogram showed sinus rhythm with diffuse reploarisation disturbances. Chest radiography revealed cardiomegaly (cardiothoracic index of 0.67) with a right paracardial opacity. Abdominal ultrasound showed a moderate peritoneal effusion and transthoracic ultrasound showed a tumour occupying the right atrial cavity but sparing the interatrial septum. The patient underwent emergency open heart surgery for tumour resection and right atrial wall repair with autologous pericardium. Histology confirmed a
haemangioma
. Follow-up at one month was uneventful. The clinical, diagnostic and therapeutic features of this case are underlined.
...
PMID:[Haemangioma of the right atrium revealed by cardiogenic shock]. 1588 51
Primary cardiac tumors are rare and their subdivision often difficult because of their unknown origin. In the most recent classification, cardiac tumors are divided into benign (about 75% and malignant neoplasms in relationship to their tissue differentiation (rhabdomyoma,
haemangioma
, etc.) or uncertain aetiology (myxoma, papillary fibroelastoma). Primary malignant tumors are maimly represented by sarcomas. The most frequent tumor is cardiac myxoma, which by itself represents about 50% of all primary cardiac neoplasms. Although non-invasive technologies as trans-esophageal ecocardiography allow the detection and exact localization of cardiac mass, clinical diagnosis is often tardive. This is due, besides the intrinsic rarity, to two main factors: first, the tumor is often asymptomatic (incidental autopic finding) or; alternatively, it may show aspecif symptoms mimicking
heart failure
or other pathologies. In this article, clinicopathological features of main primary cardiac tumors are presented. Investigation of the histogenesis of some of these neoplasms is still a primary field of research.
...
PMID:[Cardiac tumors]. 1625 77
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