Why do you have vascular tumors in your mouth?

Why do you have vascular tumors in your mouth?

Many netizens know that there is a risk of self-regression of vascular cancers in infants and young children, but few know that vascular tumours are divided into two categories: vascular tumours and vascular malformations.

Angioma is associated with fertilisation periods, stabilization periods and degradation periods, as opposed to vascular malformations, which tend to increase as the age of the child increases.

Also, both vascular tumours and vascular malformations are likely to increase the tumours and ulcers when they occur in the oral cavity due to irritation, such as swallowing, and may even affect the feeding, talking and even breathing of patients when the tumours are too large, so that vascular tumours in infants or in the adult cavity are listed as high-risk vascular tumors that must be treated in a timely manner.

For example, the next patient, even though his family was in time to receive a doctor when he discovered that the right lip color was abnormal, could see tumour growth within his or her mouth and under his or her tongue as a result of the delay in his or her subsequent treatment.

After ultrasound, it was found that the patient’s tumour had a low-reciprocal hemorrhagic disease, a veritable aneurysm, which met the diagnostic criteria for vascular tumours during the fertilisation period, and initially decided to apply it hard. A comprehensive treatment programme for suppository + oral proparore has been followed by simple stupor embolism because of the concern of the families of the infected children that the side effects of the drug are too high.

Fortunately, the treatment is more timely, so that the tumor of a child who has undergone a treatment process has become significantly constricted, with no recurrence observed six months after discharge and one year of review.

Pictures have been authorized by the children’s families and coded.

Angioplasm.