Vascular malformations and tumors

Changed by Yuranga Weerakkody, 15 Jul 2023
Disclosures - updated 15 May 2023: Nothing to disclose

Updates to Article Attributes

Body was changed:

Vascular malformations and tumoursare a heterogeneous group of lesions that may affect the arterial, capillary, venous or lymphatic system or any combination thereof. They encompass a bewildering range of lesions,  syndromes, and masses ranging from the relatively common (e.g. infantile haemangioma and arteriovenous malformations (AVM)) to the rare (e.g. Dabska tumour and Bean syndrome).

Terminology

There is significant variability in nomenclature in the literature with many established terms being vague, or downright misleading. A number of classification systems have naturally been proposed over the years, with the system initially described by Mulliken and Glowacki in 1982 2, now adopted by the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA), becoming the standard. Despite this many older terms remain ingrained in textbooks, articles and day to day practice. As such when reporting these lesions we suggest using the modern ISSVA terminology, followed in brackets by the "traditional" term. 

Classification systems

The main classification both radiologists and clinicians should be familiar with is the ISSVA classification of vascular anomalies

Another popular classification system is the Hamburg classification system of congenital vascular malformations

According to location  

As many of these lesions can occur anywhere in body in some instances they can be conveniently classified according to location, for examples: 

  • -<p><strong>Vascular malformations and tumours</strong><strong> </strong>are a heterogeneous group of lesions that may affect the arterial, capillary, venous or lymphatic system or any combination thereof. They encompass a bewildering range of lesions,  syndromes, and masses ranging from the relatively common (e.g. <a href="/articles/infantile-hemangioma">infantile haemangioma</a> and <a href="/articles/arteriovenous-malformations">arteriovenous malformations (AVM)</a>) to the rare (e.g. <a title="Dabska tumour" href="/articles/papillary-intralymphatic-angioendothelioma">Dabska tumour</a> and <a href="/articles/bean-syndrome">Bean syndrome</a>).</p><h4>Terminology</h4><p>There is significant variability in nomenclature in the literature with many established terms being vague, or downright misleading. A number of classification systems have naturally been proposed over the years, with the system initially described by Mulliken and Glowacki in 1982 <sup>2</sup>, now adopted by the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA), becoming the standard. Despite this many older terms remain ingrained in textbooks, articles and day to day practice. As such when reporting these lesions we suggest using the modern ISSVA terminology, followed in brackets by the "traditional" term. </p><h4>Classification systems</h4><p>The main classification both radiologists and clinicians should be familiar with is the <a href="/articles/issva-classification-of-vascular-anomalies">ISSVA classification of vascular anomalies</a>. </p><p>Another popular classification system is the <a href="/articles/hamburg-classification-system-of-vascular-malformations">Hamburg classification system of congenital vascular malformations</a>. </p><h4>According to location  </h4><p>As many of these lesions can occur anywhere in body in some instances they can be conveniently classified according to location, for examples: </p><ul>
  • -<li><a href="/articles/pulmonary-arteriovenous-malformation">pulmonary arteriovenous malformation</a></li>
  • -<li><a href="/articles/cerebral-vascular-malformations">cerebral vascular malformation</a></li>
  • -<li><a href="/articles/spinal-avm">spinal arteriovenous malformation</a></li>
  • +<p><strong>Vascular malformations and tumours</strong><strong> </strong>are a heterogeneous group of lesions that may affect the arterial, capillary, venous or lymphatic system or any combination thereof. They encompass a bewildering range of lesions,  syndromes, and masses ranging from the relatively common (e.g. <a href="/articles/infantile-hemangioma">infantile haemangioma</a> and <a href="/articles/arteriovenous-malformation-2">arteriovenous malformations (AVM)</a>) to the rare (e.g. <a title="Dabska tumour" href="/articles/papillary-intralymphatic-angioendothelioma">Dabska tumour</a> and <a href="/articles/bean-syndrome">Bean syndrome</a>).</p><h4>Terminology</h4><p>There is significant variability in nomenclature in the literature with many established terms being vague, or downright misleading. A number of classification systems have naturally been proposed over the years, with the system initially described by Mulliken and Glowacki in 1982 <sup>2</sup>, now adopted by the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA), becoming the standard. Despite this many older terms remain ingrained in textbooks, articles and day to day practice. As such when reporting these lesions we suggest using the modern ISSVA terminology, followed in brackets by the "traditional" term. </p><h4>Classification systems</h4><p>The main classification both radiologists and clinicians should be familiar with is the <a href="/articles/issva-classification-of-vascular-anomalies">ISSVA classification of vascular anomalies</a>. </p><p>Another popular classification system is the <a href="/articles/hamburg-classification-system-of-vascular-malformations">Hamburg classification system of congenital vascular malformations</a>. </p><h4>According to location  </h4><p>As many of these lesions can occur anywhere in body in some instances they can be conveniently classified according to location, for examples: </p><ul>
  • +<li><a href="/articles/pulmonary-arteriovenous-malformation">pulmonary arteriovenous malformation</a></li>
  • +<li><a href="/articles/cerebrovascular-malformations">cerebral vascular malformation</a></li>
  • +<li><a href="/articles/spinal-avm">spinal arteriovenous malformation</a></li>

Updates to Synonym Attributes

Title was added:
Vascular malformation congenital
Slug was set to vascular-malformation-congenital.
Type was set to Synonym.
Visible was set to false.
Content Type was set to Article.

ADVERTISEMENT: Supporters see fewer/no ads

Updating… Please wait.

 Unable to process the form. Check for errors and try again.

 Thank you for updating your details.