“…As for diagnosis, most were made by pathology without MRI or CT examination in the earlier reported cases [4][5][6][7][8][9]13,16] .With the progress of imaging technology, MRI was performed in most cases reported recently,which showed that lesions involved pelvic cavity, retroperitoneum, groin, spinal muscle, buttocks, uterus, rectovaginal septum, vaginal wall,beside the superficial part of the perineum [10,12,15] .Therefore, it is speculated that the previously reported cases whose manifestations limited to the labia, may had the probability of missed diagnosis.According to recommendations from the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies in 2015,ultrasound and MRI are the first-line imaging techniques for identifying, characterizing, and evaluating the anatomic extent of vascular malformations [18] .In our case,MRI provided direct evidence to support the diagnosis of LMs.…”