The progress is particularly rapid and even endangers the life of the baby’s special aneurysm – the Kame syndrome.

In 1940, two scholars, Kasabach and Merritt, reported on a particular case of capillary vascular cancer:

Shortly after birth, a male infant experienced a erythromatic change in his left leg, and the stove spreads rapidly from his left leg to other parts of the body, such as the abdomen, the chest, etc., while the slabs of the sick children were abnormally low. This particular aneurysm was later clinically referred to as the Kame syndrome or the Kame phenomenon (a caustic aneurysm syndrome associated with reduced purple slabs).

The common clinical symptoms and characteristics of the Came syndrome are:

1. The boundaries of vascular tumors are unclear, and they are hard and hot.

2. Rapidly developing, some patients may be exposed to yellow stuns or chest or abdominal water.

3. Skin can be seen to produce multiple blood spots or purple thallium.

4. Decline in blood platets

Angioplasm.