Abstract

To describe the diagnostic features, appearance, and vascularization pattern of venous malformations (VMs) at Doppler ultrasonography (US). Between February 1991 and May 1997, 51 soft-tissue VMs were studied with Doppler US in patients between 1 day and 21 years of age (mean age, 9 years). These VMs were located in the maxillofacial region (n = 19), trunk (n = 5), and upper (n = 10) and lower (n = 17) extremities. Twenty-three VMs had venographic confirmation, seven had only histologic confirmation, and 21 had both venographic and histologic confirmation. US was performed with 7.5- or 7-10-MHz linear transducers, a low pulse repetition frequency (mean, 1,680 Hz), and the lowest wall filter (25-50 Hz). At gray-scale US, VMs appeared as hypoechoic, heterogeneous lesions in 82% of cases. All lesions displayed compressibility. In eight lesions (16%), phleboliths were identified, thus confirming the diagnosis of VM. Analysis of vascular flow revealed monophasic, low-velocity flow in 40 VMs (78%), with an average flow velocity of 0.22 kHz. Biphasic flow was noted at the periphery of three lesions, which is indicative of a mixed capillary-venous malformation. The remaining eight lesions did not display any flow. In pediatric patients, Doppler US is a noninvasive, easily available, and rapid mode of investigation of vascular lesions and can help confirm the diagnosis of VM when it shows a characteristic flow pattern.

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