Contrast-enhancing intracranial masses are rarely found in infants with extracranial capillary haemangiomas (CH). We aimed to assess their nature and progression in three patients undergoing CT and/or MRI. The changes in size of both extra- and intracranial lesions were recorded. In a fourth case, a single examination was obtained. All patients harboured one or two enhancing intracranial nodular, meningeal-based lesions. Diffuse leptomeningeal enhancement of the cerebellar surface was also seen in one, which disappeared at follow-up. In all but one of the cases, the intracranial lesions were on the same side as the extracranial CH. These lesions and the extracranial CH demonstrated parallel changes in size (suggesting that both represent CH) during follow-up of 1-2 years: the size of intracranial lesions and the extracranial CH decreased in two cases, whereas it was unchanged in the third. One patient had a persistent trigeminal artery, while another had cerebellar atrophy with high signal in the cortex on T2-weighted images. In some cases, extracranial CH are part of PHACE syndrome; the association with intracranial CH might represent a peculiar phenotype of this rare vascular phakomatosis. As extracranial CH are known to regress spontaneously in the majority of cases, a conservative approach is recommended also for presumed intracranial CH; surgery should be avoided unless follow-up studies demonstrate growth.
Macleod/Swyer-James syndrome is an uncommon and complex disease characterized by roentgenographic hyperlucency of one lung or lobe due to loss of the pulmonary vascular structure and to alveolar overdistension. This syndrome seems to be an acquired disease that follows viral bronchiolitis and pneumonitis in childhood. It must be differentiated from many other causes of unilateral lung "transradiancy" on the chest roentgenogram, such as those related to congenital bronchial and/or vascular abnormalities. We here describe an 11-year-old patient with Macleod/Swyer-James syndrome and bronchiectasis resulting in severe recurrent bronchopulmonary infections. Despite the severe impairment of pulmonary function, the patient underwent resection of the right lung with progressive improvement of clinical and physiologic parameters.
We report on the neuroradiological studies performed on three infants with capillary haemangioma (CH) of the head and neck with associated posterior fossa and arterial abnormalities. Posterior fossa malformations were represented by cerebellar hemispheric and vermian hypoplasia and cerebellar cortical dysgenesis, whereas arterial anomalies included bilateral agenesis, kinking, and looping of the internal carotid arteries. One patient had marked exophthalmos due to intraorbital CH. We suggest that these patients had an incomplete phenotypic expression of PHACES syndrome, a vascular phakomatosis characterised by the variable association of posterior fossa malformations, CH, arterial anomalies, coarctation of the aorta and cardiac defects, eye abnormalities, and sternal and medioventral defects. Evidence suggests that PHACES syndrome is not a random association but a true phakomatosis; further studies are awaited to shed light on a possible genetic background. The phenotypic spectrum is broad and still largely unexplored, and precise diagnostic criteria have not yet been identified. A causal teratogenic influence, possibly related to anomalous expression of vascular growth factors and their modulators, is suggested to occur between gestational weeks 3 and 5.5
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