In a private letter, a precious mother said that her baby had a red spot, that an vascular tumor had been reported on the Internet, and that it was described as an vascular malformation. So she wondered if ordinary people with no medical background could quickly distinguish between vascular tumors and vascular malformations?
In fact, it’s time for the baby to start by understanding the difference between an angiogenesis and angiogenesis.
So-called tumours, which continue to divide cells and cause them to grow, are, in large white, more cells in the tissue, so that common aneurysms are more likely to increase in the short term; as for vascular malformations, it is easier to understand that the vascular cell does not grow, but the agiogenesis is disordered (more or less), such as the most common hysterectonic tumours, which can be simply understood to mean that the veins have become more and more mutated; and anatrical malformations, which can simply be understood as a direct connection between the aneurys and the veins due to the absence of a fine carotid vein.
When we get this information, let’s talk about the simple difference between vascular tumors and vascular malformations — looking at changes.
As a result of clinical observations by scholars, 95 per cent of infant aneurysms occur only after 1-2 weeks of life and increase rapidly in the short term.
Angiological malformations are often detected by family members at birth, although tumour changes are not significant.
It should be noted that there are also shortcomings in the above-mentioned methodology. For example, some newborns have congenital aneurysms, which can be detected after birth, and most of them do not increase; others have vascular malformations that are difficult to detect by family members long after birth because they are smaller and deeper.
Therefore, it would be better to go to the hospital and have a specialist examine the vascular tumors or vascular malformations on the children.
(part of the picture is from the Internet, hacked)
Angioplasm.