Tufted angiomas of the head and neck

Standard

Tufted angiomas of the head and neck. / Häußler, S M; Uecker, F C; Knopke, S; Roßner, F; Olze, H; Böttcher, A.

In: HNO, Vol. 66, No. (Suppl 1), 10.01.2018, p. 1-6.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Häußler, SM, Uecker, FC, Knopke, S, Roßner, F, Olze, H & Böttcher, A 2018, 'Tufted angiomas of the head and neck', HNO, vol. 66, no. (Suppl 1), pp. 1-6. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00106-017-0375-3

APA

Häußler, S. M., Uecker, F. C., Knopke, S., Roßner, F., Olze, H., & Böttcher, A. (2018). Tufted angiomas of the head and neck. HNO, 66((Suppl 1)), 1-6. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00106-017-0375-3

Vancouver

Häußler SM, Uecker FC, Knopke S, Roßner F, Olze H, Böttcher A. Tufted angiomas of the head and neck. HNO. 2018 Jan 10;66((Suppl 1)):1-6. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00106-017-0375-3

Bibtex

@article{8df46dcd08f7412398b3f0eb868718e2,
title = "Tufted angiomas of the head and neck",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Tufted angiomas (TAs) are uncommon benign vascular tumors mostly located cutaneously or subcutaneously in the skin of the neck and upper trunk, which appear during childhood and grow slowly. TAs are a variant of lobular capillary hemangiomas. This is the first study to provide an overview of the current literature in combination with the authors' own clinical experience on this rare entity in the head and neck area with non-dermatological localization.METHODS: A selective Medline and Google Scholar database search was performed. Additionally, we conducted an ICD-10-based database search on hemangiomas (D18.0) in the Charit{\'e} SAP patient records.RESULTS: We identified 13 reports in the literature consisting of 16 cases of TA of the head and neck. Males were predominantly affected by TAs (70.6%). The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 31.5 years; the mean maximum diameter of the tumors was 16.3 mm. Additionally, we report on one case of TA in our Department of Head and Neck Surgery. A male patient presented with swelling and redness of the left upper eyelid. Radiological examination with computed tomography showed a suprabulbar tumor with a diameter of 13 mm. The tumor was surgically removed via a transcutaneous blepharoplasty approach with the patient under general anesthesia.DISCUSSION: There is only one other case report on the surgical excision of an intra-orbital TA described to date. Here, we present an epidemiological overview, therapeutic considerations, and differential diagnoses.",
keywords = "Journal Article, Hemangioma/diagnosis, Humans, Adult, Female, Male, Child, Skin Neoplasms/diagnosis",
author = "H{\"a}u{\ss}ler, {S M} and Uecker, {F C} and S Knopke and F Ro{\ss}ner and H Olze and A B{\"o}ttcher",
year = "2018",
month = jan,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1007/s00106-017-0375-3",
language = "English",
volume = "66",
pages = "1--6",
journal = "HNO",
issn = "0017-6192",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "(Suppl 1)",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tufted angiomas of the head and neck

AU - Häußler, S M

AU - Uecker, F C

AU - Knopke, S

AU - Roßner, F

AU - Olze, H

AU - Böttcher, A

PY - 2018/1/10

Y1 - 2018/1/10

N2 - BACKGROUND: Tufted angiomas (TAs) are uncommon benign vascular tumors mostly located cutaneously or subcutaneously in the skin of the neck and upper trunk, which appear during childhood and grow slowly. TAs are a variant of lobular capillary hemangiomas. This is the first study to provide an overview of the current literature in combination with the authors' own clinical experience on this rare entity in the head and neck area with non-dermatological localization.METHODS: A selective Medline and Google Scholar database search was performed. Additionally, we conducted an ICD-10-based database search on hemangiomas (D18.0) in the Charité SAP patient records.RESULTS: We identified 13 reports in the literature consisting of 16 cases of TA of the head and neck. Males were predominantly affected by TAs (70.6%). The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 31.5 years; the mean maximum diameter of the tumors was 16.3 mm. Additionally, we report on one case of TA in our Department of Head and Neck Surgery. A male patient presented with swelling and redness of the left upper eyelid. Radiological examination with computed tomography showed a suprabulbar tumor with a diameter of 13 mm. The tumor was surgically removed via a transcutaneous blepharoplasty approach with the patient under general anesthesia.DISCUSSION: There is only one other case report on the surgical excision of an intra-orbital TA described to date. Here, we present an epidemiological overview, therapeutic considerations, and differential diagnoses.

AB - BACKGROUND: Tufted angiomas (TAs) are uncommon benign vascular tumors mostly located cutaneously or subcutaneously in the skin of the neck and upper trunk, which appear during childhood and grow slowly. TAs are a variant of lobular capillary hemangiomas. This is the first study to provide an overview of the current literature in combination with the authors' own clinical experience on this rare entity in the head and neck area with non-dermatological localization.METHODS: A selective Medline and Google Scholar database search was performed. Additionally, we conducted an ICD-10-based database search on hemangiomas (D18.0) in the Charité SAP patient records.RESULTS: We identified 13 reports in the literature consisting of 16 cases of TA of the head and neck. Males were predominantly affected by TAs (70.6%). The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 31.5 years; the mean maximum diameter of the tumors was 16.3 mm. Additionally, we report on one case of TA in our Department of Head and Neck Surgery. A male patient presented with swelling and redness of the left upper eyelid. Radiological examination with computed tomography showed a suprabulbar tumor with a diameter of 13 mm. The tumor was surgically removed via a transcutaneous blepharoplasty approach with the patient under general anesthesia.DISCUSSION: There is only one other case report on the surgical excision of an intra-orbital TA described to date. Here, we present an epidemiological overview, therapeutic considerations, and differential diagnoses.

KW - Journal Article

KW - Hemangioma/diagnosis

KW - Humans

KW - Adult

KW - Female

KW - Male

KW - Child

KW - Skin Neoplasms/diagnosis

U2 - 10.1007/s00106-017-0375-3

DO - 10.1007/s00106-017-0375-3

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 28667388

VL - 66

SP - 1

EP - 6

JO - HNO

JF - HNO

SN - 0017-6192

IS - (Suppl 1)

ER -