Benign Tumors: Common Types - Vessel Buddies
- Hemangioma: Most common.
- Capillary: Closely packed capillaries.
- Strawberry (Juvenile): Infants, regresses. Skin.
- Cherry (Senile): Adults, ↑ age. Trunk.
- Cavernous: Large, dilated channels. Liver, brain. Risk of bleed. Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) assoc.
- Capillary: Closely packed capillaries.
- Lymphangioma: Lymphatic channels.
- Capillary (Simple): Small channels. Head, neck, axilla.
- Cavernous (Cystic Hygroma): Large cysts. Neck, axilla. Turner syndrome.
- Glomus Tumor: Painful, red-blue nodule under nails. From glomus body smooth muscle cells (thermoregulation).
- Bacillary Angiomatosis: Immunocompromised (HIV). Bartonella spp. (e.g., B. henselae).
- Pyogenic Granuloma: Polypoid, red, bleeds. Skin, oral mucosa (gingiva). Rapid growth. Trauma, pregnancy.

⭐ Cystic hygroma (cavernous lymphangioma) is frequently associated with Turner syndrome (45,X0).
Benign Tumors: Special Forms - Unique Bloomers
- Glomus Tumor:
- Painful, small, red-blue nodule, often under fingernails.
- Origin: Modified smooth muscle cells of glomus body (thermoregulatory).
- Key feature: Paroxysmal pain triggered by cold/pressure.
- Bacillary Angiomatosis:
- Etiology: Bartonella henselae or B. quintana.
- Population: Immunocompromised individuals (esp. HIV/AIDS).
- Clinical: Red to purple papules/nodules; can involve skin, bone, brain, other organs.
- Histology: Neutrophilic infiltrate; organisms seen with Warthin-Starry stain.
- Pyogenic Granuloma (Lobular Capillary Hemangioma):
- Rapidly growing, friable, red, often pedunculated lesion.
- Common sites: Skin (fingers), oral mucosa (gingiva - esp. during pregnancy: "granuloma gravidarum").
- Often history of trauma.
⭐ Bacillary Angiomatosis is caused by Bartonella species and is crucial to differentiate from Kaposi sarcoma in immunocompromised patients; Warthin-Starry stain is diagnostic, revealing the bacilli.
Intermediate Tumors: Borderline - Edge Riders
-
Locally aggressive neoplasms; potential for recurrence & metastasis is low but present.
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Kaposi Sarcoma (KS)
- Etiology: Human Herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8 / KSHV) infection, particularly in immunocompromised states.
- Key Features: Proliferation of spindle cells forming slit-like vascular spaces, extravasated red blood cells, hemosiderin deposition.
- Types:
- Classic (elderly, indolent)
- Endemic African (aggressive)
- Transplant-associated
- AIDS-associated (epidemic, most common HIV-related malignancy).
- IHC: CD31, CD34, LANA-1 (for HHV-8).

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Hemangioendothelioma
- Spectrum of borderline vascular tumors.
- Epithelioid Hemangioendothelioma (EHE)
- Cells: Epithelioid endothelial cells, often with intracytoplasmic lumina/vacuoles (blister cells).
- Genetics: Characteristic WWTR1-CAMTA1 or YAP1-TFE3 gene fusions.
- Behavior: Can be indolent or aggressive; metastasizes in ~20-30% of cases.
⭐ EHE commonly involves multiple nodules in organs like the liver or lungs at presentation, mimicking metastatic carcinoma.
Malignant Tumors: Angiosarcoma - Angio Invaders
- Definition: Aggressive malignant tumor of endothelial cell origin.
- Common Sites:
- Skin (esp. scalp, face of elderly; UV exposure).
- Soft tissue, breast, liver, spleen, bone.
- Etiology & Associations:
- Chronic lymphedema (📌 Stewart-Treves syndrome: post-mastectomy).
- Radiation therapy.
- Chemical carcinogens:
- Vinyl chloride (liver angiosarcoma).
- Arsenic, Thorotrast.
- Foreign bodies (e.g., Dacron grafts).
- Morphology:
- Gross: Ill-defined, hemorrhagic, infiltrative lesions; from red patches to fleshy masses.
- Micro: Variable; anastomosing vascular channels lined by atypical, pleomorphic endothelial cells to solid sheets of anaplastic/spindle cells. "Dissection of collagen".

- Immunohistochemistry (IHC):
- Positive for endothelial markers: CD31 (key), CD34, Factor VIII (vWF), ERG (nuclear).
- Prognosis: Poor; locally aggressive with high rates of recurrence & metastasis (lungs, liver).
⭐ Hepatic angiosarcoma is strongly associated with exposure to vinyl chloride, arsenic, and Thorotrast.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Kaposi Sarcoma: HHV-8 association, common in AIDS; features slit-like vascular spaces.
- Bacillary Angiomatosis: Bartonella infection in immunocompromised individuals; neutrophilic infiltrate is key.
- Angiosarcoma: Malignant endothelial tumor; linked to radiation, chronic lymphedema (Stewart-Treves), vinyl chloride.
- Hemangiomas: Benign vascular tumors; strawberry type (infantile) often regresses, cavernous type common.
- Glomus Tumor: Painful, benign lesion, typically subungual; arises from glomus body cells.
- Pyogenic Granuloma: Rapidly growing benign polypoid capillary hemangioma; linked to trauma, pregnancy.
- Cystic Hygroma: Lymphangioma variant, often in neck (posterior triangle); associated with Turner syndrome (45,X0).
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