1989
DOI: 10.1148/radiology.170.2.2911671
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Lymphangiomas in children: MR imaging.

Abstract: Seventeen lymphangiomas in 15 patients were imaged with magnetic resonance (MR) to define the nature, extent, and anatomic relationships of these lesions. The MR and pathologic findings were then compared to determine the histologic basis for the signal-intensity characteristics of these lesions. The signal intensity of 13 lesions was similar to or slightly less than that of muscle on T1-weighted images and greater than that of fat on T2-weighted images. This appearance correlated with the presence of ectatic … Show more

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Cited by 158 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…Description of the MR features of the tumors is limited to pediatric cases, none of which were mediastinal in location [7]. Because the preoperative diagnosis in adults can be difficult, we retrospectively reviewed 19 pathologically proved cases of adult thoracic lymphangioma in which CT scans or MR images were available in order to describe the spectrum of imaging features of this tumor.…”
Section: Thoracicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Description of the MR features of the tumors is limited to pediatric cases, none of which were mediastinal in location [7]. Because the preoperative diagnosis in adults can be difficult, we retrospectively reviewed 19 pathologically proved cases of adult thoracic lymphangioma in which CT scans or MR images were available in order to describe the spectrum of imaging features of this tumor.…”
Section: Thoracicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…MR imaging has proved useful for delineating the extent of vascular anomalies when applied to artemiovenous malfommations (AVM5) [1] on lymphatic malformations [2]. However, the term hemangioma is often used generically, and in the past has been used to describe a combination of infantile hemangiomata and venous malformations with confusing radiologic findings [3].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[4] About 75% of lymphangiomas occur in the neck and 20% in the axillary region [1,5,6,3] in a small number of cases; other locations including the mediastinum, retroperitoneum, oral cavity, mesentery, bones and orbit have been reported. [5,7,8,6] The sexes are affected equally. [5] Usually these tumours present as easily compressible.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[9,7] At birth 50% are present and 90% are evident by two years of age. [6] Clinically, they may rarely bleed spontaneously. [10] Although, lymphangioma is a benign tumour, its infiltrative tendency enables it to grow along tissue planes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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