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Congenital Vascular Anomalies

Congenital Vascular Anomalies

Congenital Vascular Anomalies

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Intro & Classification - Vessel ID Parade

Congenital vascular anomalies (CVAs): localized defects in vascular morphogenesis. ISSVA classification is standard.

  • ISSVA Categories:
    • Vascular Tumors: Endothelial proliferation (e.g., Infantile Hemangioma). Often involute.
    • Vascular Malformations: Morphogenesis errors. Present at birth, grow with child, do not involute.
      • Simple: Capillary (CM), Venous (VM), Lymphatic (LM), Arteriovenous (AVM - high flow).
      • Combined: e.g., Klippel-Trenaunay.

⭐ Vascular malformations are errors of morphogenesis, grow commensurately with the child, and do not spontaneously involute (unlike many infantile hemangiomas).

Low-Flow Malformations - Gentle Flow Issues

Congenital errors of vascular morphogenesis with slow blood flow.

TypeClinical FeaturesSyndromesHistology
CapillaryPink/red macules (port-wine stain/nevus flammeus), darken; no thrill.Sturge-Weber (SWS), Klippel-Trenaunay (KTS)Dilated dermal capillaries.
VenousSoft, compressible, blue masses; swell with dependency; pain, thrombosis.Klippel-Trenaunay, Blue Rubber Bleb (BRBNS)Dilated, irregular venous channels; phleboliths.
LymphaticMacrocystic (cystic hygroma) or microcystic; clear fluid; infections.Turner, Noonan, Gorham-StoutDilated lymphatic channels, flat endothelium.

📌 SWS: Stain (Port-wine), Seizures, Sight (glaucoma).

⭐ Sturge-Weber syndrome (encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis) classically presents with a facial port-wine stain (nevus flammeus) in the V1/V2 trigeminal distribution, ipsilateral leptomeningeal angiomatosis, and glaucoma.

High-Flow Malformations - Wild Waterways

  • Direct artery-to-vein shunts, bypassing capillaries; rapid flow.
  • Often warm; may present as pulsatile mass.
  • Types:
    • Arteriovenous Malformations (AVMs): Nidus of dysplastic vessels.
    • Arteriovenous Fistulas (AVFs): Direct artery-vein connection.
  • Key Signs:
    • Palpable thrill, audible bruit. 📌 (Nicoladoni-Branham sign: bradycardia on fistula compression).
    • Skin: warm, red, ulceration, bleeding.
    • Limb overgrowth.
  • Risks:
    • High-output heart failure (↑preload).
    • Hemorrhage.
    • Distal ischemia (steal phenomenon).
    • Pain, neurological deficits (CNS AVMs).
  • Dx: Doppler US, MRA/CTA, Angiography (gold standard).
  • Rx: Embolization, surgery, radiosurgery.

⭐ A palpable thrill or audible bruit over a vascular lesion is highly suggestive of a high-flow arteriovenous malformation (AVM) due to direct shunting of blood.

Infantile & Congenital Hemangiomas - Berry Mark Tales

📌 IH: Grows then Goes; CH: Stays or Fades Fast

Infantile Hemangioma Growth Phases

Key differences between these common benign vascular tumors:

FeatureInfantile Hemangioma (IH)Congenital Hemangioma (CH)
OnsetPostnatal (first few weeks), grows rapidlyAt birth (fully formed), minimal postnatal growth
GLUT-1Positive (hallmark)Negative
Natural HistoryProliferate (6-12 mo) → Plateau → Involute (over years)RICH: Rapid involution (by 12-18 mo); NICH: Persists/grows proportionally
AppearanceBright red "strawberry" (superficial); can be deep/mixedOften violaceous, telangiectatic, central pallor/halo; RICH/NICH types

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Arteriovenous Malformations (AVMs): Direct artery-to-vein connections; high risk of cerebral hemorrhage.
  • Capillary Malformations (Port-Wine Stains): Strongly linked to Sturge-Weber syndrome (facial stain, leptomeningeal angioma, glaucoma).
  • Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (HHT/Osler-Weber-Rendu): Autosomal dominant; mucocutaneous telangiectasias, recurrent epistaxis, organ AVMs.
  • Lymphatic Malformations (e.g., Cystic Hygroma): Often in neck/axilla; can cause airway obstruction.
  • Klippel-Trenaunay Syndrome: Characterized by capillary malformation, venous varicosities, and bony/soft tissue hypertrophy.
  • Developmental Venous Anomalies (DVAs): Most frequent intracranial vascular anomaly; usually asymptomatic and benign.

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