Hepatic angiosarcoma is an extremely rare primary malignant vascular tumour in children with very poor prognosis. Radiological diagnosis of hepatic angiosarcoma is challenging due to overlapping imaging features with other benign vascular hepatic tumours, particularly infantile hepatic haemangioma. Consumptive hypothyroidism is a condition that is almost exclusively associated with infantile hepatic haemangioma and has never been reported in angiosarcoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis report demonstrates the feasibility and safety of using contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) to confirm intranodal needle position in children requiring dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance lymphangiography (DCMRL). A total of 7 patients were evaluated using CEUS after nodal puncture on a detachable magenetic resonance table, with 2 nodes cannulated in each patient, resulting in a combined evaluation of 14 nodes. The nodal cannulation success rate using CEUS was 85.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis brief report aims to evaluate the treatment outcome of transarterial embolization in ruptured hepatoblastoma complicated with acute intra-abdominal hemorrhage. Three children (mean age 6 years) with high-risk hepatoblastoma presented with rupture and acute intra-abdominal hemorrhage. In addition to aggressive fluid resuscitation and blood product support, super-selective embolization of the arteries with active bleeding or pseudoaneurysm was performed using calibrated gelfoam particles, with a technical success rate of 100%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis brief report demonstrates the diagnostic utility of cone-beam CT lymphangiography (CBCTL) with intranodal injection of water-soluble iodinated contrast agent for assessing lymphatic disorders in two infants who were contraindicated for MRI and oil-based contrast agent. Both infants had dextro-transposition of the great arteries (d-TGA) and presented with high-output chylothoraces that were recalcitrant to conservative medical therapy. Both infants were diagnosed with central lymphatic flow disorder based on the CBCTL findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Percutaneous ultrasound-guided biopsy is performed in paediatric patients for evaluation of diffuse renal parenchymal disease. When compared with the non-coaxial technique, the coaxial technique has the advantages of obtaining multiple tissue cores via a single capsular puncture and post-biopsy tract embolisation.
Objectives: To compare the coaxial and non-coaxial techniques of percutaneous ultrasound (US)-guided biopsy of native kidney parenchyma in children and adolescents with renal disease.
Tenosynovial giant cell tumor (TGCT) is a benign condition that arises from tendon sheaths, synovium, or bursae and is classified according to the site of involvement (intra-articular versus extra-articular) and pattern of growth (localized versus diffuse). The diffuse form tends to present as peri-articular masses and are locally aggressive. It usually presents as a mono-articular process affecting larger joints.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistoryAn 8-month-old previously healthy boy was referred to our institution by the maternal child health center for progressive truncal hypotonia and developmental delay. This infant was born after an uncomplicated pregnancy with no perinatal complications. He was delivered at full term via spontaneous vaginal delivery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistoryAn 8-month-old previously healthy boy was referred to our institution by the maternal child health center for progressive truncal hypotonia and developmental delay. This infant was born after an uncomplicated pregnancy with no perinatal complications. He was delivered at full term via spontaneous vaginal delivery.
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