Because there’s no cure for a venous malformation (VM), we focus on managing your child’s symptoms. We only recommend treating a VM if the malformation:
- Causes pain
- Creates a deformity
- Obstructs a vital structure such as your child's airway
- Affects your child's vision
- Causes gastrointestinal bleeding
Children with VMs sometimes need multidisciplinary care. Specialists that may be part of your child’s care team include the following:
- Dermatologist
- Plastic surgeon
- General surgeon
- Interventional radiologist
- Orthopedist
- Hematologist
The treatment options we recommend may include:
Sclerotherapy
Sclerotherapy, in which an interventional radiologists injects a solution into the malformation that irritates the abnormal veins and makes them shrink or disappear, is our first choice of therapy.
Compression garments
If your child has a VM on his arm or leg, your doctor may recommend that he or she wear these tight-fitting pieces of clothing on the affected limb to reduce pain and swelling.
Anticoagulant therapy
One of the potential risks of a large VM is that a blood clot formed in the abnormal blood vessels will cause pain. Your doctor may recommend that your child take a daily dose of an anticoagulant (blood-thinning) medication to help prevent clots from forming. Venous malformations can also have problems with coagulation proteins that are consumed in the abnormal vessels and make a patient prone to bleeding as well as clotting, so the use of anticoagulant therapy should be monitored by your doctor.
Sirolimus therapy
Medical treatment with sirolimus can decrease pain and the fullness of venous malformations and improve coagulation levels.
Surgical resection
Surgical resection is a procedure where a surgeon removes part or all of your child's lesion. We may recommend resection if:
- A child has a small lesion that can easily be removed completely.
- Your child has GVMs (which are small and typically don't respond well to sclerotherapy) or gastrointestinal VMs.
- Your child has a deformity after undergoing sclerotherapy.