Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe typical clinical presentation of patients with microfistular, capillary-venule (CV) malformation as a variant form of arteriovenous malformations (AVM). MethodsA retrospective clinical analysis of 15 patients with CV-AVM confirmed by a computational flow model enrolled in a prospective database of patients with congenital vascular malformation between January 2008 and May 2018. ResultsThe mean age of the patients at first time of presentation was 30 years with balanced sex ratio. Presentation was dominated by soft tissue hypertrophy (n = 12 [80.0%]) and atypical varicose veins (n = 11 [73.3%]). The anatomic location of enlarged varicose veins gave no uniform pattern and did not correspond with the typical picture of primary varicose vein disease. Most often, symptomatic CV-AVM was found at the lower extremities in this series of unselected patients. The most frequent compartment affected was the subcutis (n = 14 [93.3%]), involvement of muscle was recorded in one-third and cutis in one-fourth of patients. ConclusionsA high grade of clinical suspicion is needed to recognize CV-AVM and to prevent inadequate therapy owing to missed diagnosis.

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