Deep Infantile Hemangioma in the Involuting Phase That Was Difficult to Diagnose before Surgery

Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2023 May 10;11(5):e4975. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000004975. eCollection 2023 May.

Abstract

Infantile hemangioma (IH) is a common pediatric vascular tumor and is easily diagnosed in most cases based on the clinical course and appearance, but deep IHs are difficult to diagnose based on external appearance alone. Clinical and imaging findings are therefore important clues to the diagnosis of soft tissue tumors; however, a definitive diagnosis is decided based on the pathological examination of biopsy or resection specimens. A 1-year-old girl with a subcutaneous mass on her glabella was referred to our hospital. At 3 months of age, her mother noticed a tumor that swelled when she cried. It gradually enlarged, and ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging were performed at 12 months of age. Doppler ultrasonography showed a hypo-vascular mass. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a subcutaneous mass with low-intensity on T1-weighted image and slightly high-intensity on T2-weighted image, with tiny flow voids. Computed tomography showed no frontal bone defect. The soft tissue tumor could not be diagnosed based on these imaging findings; thus, we decided to perform total resection under general anesthesia. A histopathological examination showed a highly cellular tumor with capillaries with opened small vascular channels and glucose transporter 1 positivity. Thus, it was diagnosed as deep IH transitioning from the proliferative phase to the involuting phase. Deep IHs are difficult to diagnose because characteristic imaging findings disappear during the involuting phase. We emphasize the importance of performing Doppler ultrasonography in the early phase (eg, at 6 months of age) for soft tissue tumors of infancy.

Publication types

  • Case Reports