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Prenatal Imaging Findings In Rapidly Involuting Congenital Hemangioma Of The Skull

Elia et al., 2008Other/Unknown

Elia, D., Garel, C., Enjolras, O., Vermouneix, L., Soupre, V., Oury, J. F., & Guibaud, L. (2008). Prenatal imaging findings in rapidly involuting congenital hemangioma of the skull. Ultrasound in obstetrics & gynecology : the official journal of the International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology, 31(5), 572–575. https://doi.org/10.1002/uog.5341

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Abstract

We report two cases of rapidly involuting congenital hemangioma (RICH) of the skull diagnosed in the third trimester of gestation, and also present a brief review of the literature. In both of our cases ultrasound examination showed a soft tissue vascular mass of the skull with a specific sonographic finding: a thin hyperechogenic line over the lesion and continuous with the calvaria, suggesting a subperiosteal origin and possibly accounting for a mass effect on the underlying skull. This was slight in one case and marked in the other (and associated with involvement of the calvaria). On prenatal T2‐weighted magnetic resonance imaging, the signal of each of the lesions was less marked than the hypersignal encountered in the postnatal period. Postnatal clinical and radiological follow‐up over the first few months after delivery confirmed the diagnosis of RICH in each case by demonstrating a significant decrease in the size of the tumor and regression of the vascular component, with complete involution of the lesion within a year. Copyright © 2008 ISUOG. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Case Details

Disease Location

Skull

Personal Characteristics

A 27 years old woman with 33 weeks gestation

Clinical Characteristics

Detection of a left frontal tumor in a female fetus. Homogeneous and echogenic tumor. MRI at 34 weeks showed a left frontal tumor with a slightly heterogeneous signal and hypointense foci.

Remission Characteristics

(2) after birth, the newborn was examined at 2 days of age. The firm and warm left frontal mass was covered by normal skin. By 3 months of age, the tumor had significantly decreased in size. At 1 year of age, the mass had completely dissapeared but a marked depression of the frontal bone remained.

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Not discussed