Artigo Revisado por pares

Soft-Tissue Venous Malformations in Pediatric and Young Adult Patients: Diagnosis with Doppler US

1999; Radiological Society of North America; Volume: 212; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1148/radiology.212.3.r99au11841

ISSN

1527-1315

Autores

Isabelle Trop, Josée Dubois, Laurent Guibaud, Andrée Grignon, H Patriquin, Catherine McCuaïg, Laurent Garel,

Tópico(s)

Vascular Malformations Diagnosis and Treatment

Resumo

To describe the diagnostic features, appearance, and vascularization pattern of venous malformations (VMs) at Doppler ultrasonography (US).Between February 1991 and May 1997, 51 soft-tissue VMs were studied with Doppler US in patients between 1 day and 21 years of age (mean age, 9 years). These VMs were located in the maxillofacial region (n = 19), trunk (n = 5), and upper (n = 10) and lower (n = 17) extremities. Twenty-three VMs had venographic confirmation, seven had only histologic confirmation, and 21 had both venographic and histologic confirmation. US was performed with 7.5- or 7-10-MHz linear transducers, a low pulse repetition frequency (mean, 1,680 Hz), and the lowest wall filter (25-50 Hz).At gray-scale US, VMs appeared as hypoechoic, heterogeneous lesions in 82% of cases. All lesions displayed compressibility. In eight lesions (16%), phleboliths were identified, thus confirming the diagnosis of VM. Analysis of vascular flow revealed monophasic, low-velocity flow in 40 VMs (78%), with an average flow velocity of 0.22 kHz. Biphasic flow was noted at the periphery of three lesions, which is indicative of a mixed capillary-venous malformation. The remaining eight lesions did not display any flow.In pediatric patients, Doppler US is a noninvasive, easily available, and rapid mode of investigation of vascular lesions and can help confirm the diagnosis of VM when it shows a characteristic flow pattern.

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