The vascular tumor on the baby’s face wasn’t so big, why did the doctor ask for hospital treatment?

Many people believe that the smaller the tumour of the vascular tumor, the better it is to treat it, and that there is no need for hospitalization at all when it is small.

However, they do not know that only shallow vascular tumours (sharberry-like vascular tumours) that are in a period of rapid growth and are at medium- and low risk can be treated under the direction of a doctor in the form of a maralic acid ooze in the home.

For example, in the following figure, although at first glance it is somewhat similar to strawberry vascular tumours, the tumours and their surroundings are found to be condensed at an outpatient examination and, at the end of the day, determined as mixed vascular tumours on the basis of a colour-over examination.

The patient was hospitalized for seven days and recovered three times.

Angioma of this type can only be treated by oral or joint application of angiogenesis, or by injection (hardening embolism) (which may also be combined with a combination of oral or oral Pulol).

Owing to the young age of the child and the initial treatment, both oral and drug injections require hospitalization of the child.

However, the treatment of a child with an oral drug usually requires a three-day inpatient observation, followed by a periodic review of the adjustment of the dose at each interval (January-February) and a long-term (5-18 months) of the patient; if a simple injection is used, the first general stay is about 7 days, after a period (3-6 months) and a subsequent decision is made on the basis of the specific recovery situation (if the patient is recovered well or can be terminated or treated at the clinic).

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Angioplasm.