What should we do with the upper leg dispersive aneurysm?


Parents know that plastering can treat vascular tumours, but it is not clear what vascular tumours can be used and what they cannot be used, sometimes with greater impact on the sick.

Many parents know that plastering can treat vascular tumours, but it is not clear what vascular tumours can be used and what they cannot be used, sometimes with greater impact on the sick.

For example, the patient in the chart below, who, according to his family, had a few small red dots on his right upper arm shortly after his birth, as some of the red dots began to grow, they began to rub them at the finger of their good friends, Rohr, and after some time the dots had not faded and were on the rise, they came to the hospital with them.

It was found that although the patient had an aneurysm of the baby, it could not control the growth of the tumor due to its penetration under the skin.

Given the dispersive distribution of angioma in the case, we have adopted an oral drug + local injection programme, i.e., an vascular sclerosis treatment for local tumours that have not improved significantly after the treatment of the drug.

Finally, the patient disappeared after three months of treatment and insisted that the medication should stop for nine months, and three successive reviews did not recur.

Photos have been authorized by the patient ‘ s family and processed accordingly

Angioplasm.