Benign Vascular Tumors - Friendly Neighborhood Vessels
- Cherry Hemangioma: Most common benign vascular tumor. Small, bright red papules appearing in adults; number increases with age. Do not regress.
- Spider Angioma: Central red arteriole with radiating capillaries that blanch with pressure. Associated with ↑ estrogen states (e.g., cirrhosis, pregnancy).
- Pyogenic Granuloma: Friable, red, polypoid papule. Grows rapidly and bleeds easily. Frequently follows trauma and occurs during pregnancy.
- Glomus Tumor: Painful, blue-red nodule, classically found under the nail. Arises from the thermoregulatory glomus body.

⭐ The classic triad for a Glomus Tumor is: intense paroxysmal pain, temperature sensitivity (especially to cold), and localized point tenderness.
Malignant Vascular Tumors - When Vessels Go Rogue
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Angiosarcoma
- Rare, aggressive tumor of endothelial cells.
- Associations: Chronic lymphedema (e.g., Stewart-Treves syndrome post-mastectomy), radiation therapy, sun exposure in the elderly (head/neck).
- Presentation: Bruise-like patches or nodules that can ulcerate.
- Histology: Interconnecting, anastomosing vascular channels lined by atypical, pleomorphic endothelial cells.
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Kaposi Sarcoma (KS)
- Caused by Human Herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8).
- Presentation: Red-purple macules, papules, or nodules on skin and mucosa.
- Types: Classic (elderly Mediterranean men), Endemic (African), Iatrogenic (immunosuppression), AIDS-related.
⭐ High-Yield: Kaposi Sarcoma is an AIDS-defining illness, strongly associated with HHV-8 infection, particularly when CD4+ counts drop below 200/mm³.
Reactive Vascular Lesions - Skin's Red Alerts
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Pyogenic Granuloma (Lobular Capillary Hemangioma)
- Rapidly growing, friable, red papule often at sites of minor trauma.
- Common on gingiva (pregnancy tumor), fingers, and lips.
- Misnomer: neither infectious nor a true granuloma.
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Bacillary Angiomatosis
- Caused by Bartonella spp. in immunocompromised hosts (e.g., HIV with CD4 <100).
- Red/purple papules/nodules resembling Kaposi sarcoma.
- Histology: Capillary proliferation with neutrophils and nuclear dust.
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Cherry Angioma
- Most common benign vascular tumor; small, bright red papules.
- Increase in number with age; do not spontaneously regress.
⭐ Bacillary angiomatosis is caused by Bartonella henselae or B. quintana and requires antibiotics, distinguishing it from the viral etiology of its mimic, Kaposi sarcoma.

- Cherry hemangiomas are the most common benign vascular tumors in adults, often appearing in middle age.
- Strawberry (juvenile) hemangiomas are common in newborns, grow rapidly, and typically regress spontaneously.
- Pyogenic granulomas are rapidly growing, friable red papules often seen in pregnancy or after trauma.
- Bacillary angiomatosis, caused by Bartonella spp. in the immunocompromised, mimics Kaposi sarcoma.
- Kaposi sarcoma is an HHV-8 associated malignancy, presenting as purple lesions in AIDS patients.
- Angiosarcoma is a rare, aggressive malignancy of the head and neck in the elderly.
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