Sclerotherapy is effective in the treatment of vascular malformations. However, in lesions with relatively high blood flow, its effect is not always adequate. We therefore developed a three-grade classification of vascular malformations to facilitate the selection of treatments according to vascular flow. We also developed the technique of embolosclerotherapy, in which transarterial embolisation is done before sclerotherapy to control blood flow in the lesion during sclerotherapy. We now have 14 years' experience with 112 cases of vascular malformations of the head and neck treated with sclerotherapy. Results were evaluated with pretreatment and post-treatment photographs, and reduction of volume was calculated on findings from magnetic resonance imaging. Clinical improvement in 110 cases was graded as excellent in 32 (29%), good in 48 (43%), fair in 19 (17%), and poor in 11 (10%). In 84 cases, mean rate of reduction of volume was 35%. The most common complication was haemolytic haemoglobinuria (n=37, 33%). Our results suggest that this three-grade classification is useful to judge resistance to sclerotherapy and decide on treatment. Our experience indicates that ethanolamine oleate (EO), with or without arterial embolisation, was effective using our classification of vascular dynamics. We consider EO to be equivalent or superior to other sclerosants such as ethanol.
The new treatment protocol combining Q-switched ruby laser and topical bleaching treatment using tretinoin and hydroquinone is considered effective for improvement of periorbital skin hyperpigmentation, with a low incidence of postinflammatory hyperpigmentation.
To optimize treatment of zygomatic bone fractures, patients' subjective evaluations of symptoms are necessary. The visual analog scale (VAS) was used for the quantitative assessment of subjective evaluation for symptoms and treatments in patients who underwent open reduction and rigid fixation. Degree of satisfaction and annoyances resulting from residual symptoms (deformity, pain, paresthesia, and trismus) and incisions used for exposure of the fracture site were investigated using an anonymous postal questionnaire. Forty-three patients provided responses. Total satisfaction was rated as 72.5% +/- 21.6%. Scores from the VAS for annoyance were significantly higher for paresthesia than for deformity, pain, or trismus. Residual deformity and pain significantly influenced total satisfaction. Upper vestibular, lower lid, and lateral brow incisions showed almost equivalent tendencies for annoyance. The VAS provided otherwise inaccessible information about patients' subjective evaluation. Treatment strategies should be optimized toward not only evaluation with objective measures but also patients' subjective evaluation.
Excision of intramuscular venous malformations may damage intact functional muscles, and sclerotherapy is an alternative way of relieving symptoms. Several sclerosants are available, but selection of the optimal one is controversial. We report our clinical experiences of sclerotherapy, and experimental studies in rats that investigated muscular damage after injection of various sclerosants. For the clinical study, 10 patients with intramuscular venous malformations were reviewed who had been treated by sclerotherapy using ethanolamine oleate. The rate by which the volume reduced was assessed quantitatively using findings from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Pain was cured or improved in all cases, and volume reduced on imaging analysis. There were no severe complications such as renal failure or thromboembolism. For the experimental study, 62 Wistar rats were used to investigate the toxicity of sclerosants on the intact-muscle by injecting three types of sclerosants (100% ethanol, 5% ethanolamine oleate, and 1% polidocanol). After the injection of each sclerosant into the anterior tibial muscle, the daily measurement of the circumference of the legs, histological and morphological alterations in the muscles, and maximal isometric tetanic tension, were investigated. Swelling was most prominent with ethanolamine oleate, while destruction and atrophy of the muscle were most prominent after injection of ethanol. In the clinical study, the efficacy of 5% ethanolamine oleate was at least equivalent or possibly superior to that of 100% ethanol. In the experimental study, ethanol had a more detrimental effect on muscles than the other agents. We consider that ethanolamine oleate is the most suitable sclerosant for the treatment of intramuscular venous malformations.
The objective was to prepare guidelines to perform the current optimum treatment by organizing effective and efficient treatments of hemangiomas and vascular malformations, confirming the safety, and systematizing treatment, employing evidence-based medicine (EBM) techniques and aimed at improvement of the outcomes. Clinical questions (CQs) were decided based on the important clinical issues. For document retrieval, key words for literature searches were set for each CQ and literature published from 1980 to the end of September 2014 was searched in Pubmed, Cochrane Library, and Japana Centra Revuo Medicina (JCRM). The strengths of evidence and recommendations acquired by systematic reviews were determined following the Medical Information Network Distribution System (MINDS) technique. A total of 33 CQs were used to compile recommendations and the subjects included efficacy of resection, sclerotherapy/embolization, drug therapy, laser therapy, radiotherapy, and other conservative treatment, differences in appropriate treatment due to the location of lesions and among symptoms, appropriate timing of treatment and tests, and pathological diagnosis deciding the diagnosis. Thus, the Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for Vascular Anomalies 2017 have been prepared as the evidence-based guidelines for the management of vascular anomalies.
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