Hemangioma should be treated early and standardized

As a multi-morbidity and common disease, infant hemangioma is often not treated in a timely manner due to the limitation of treatment conditions. Even if they go to hospitals, they are only treated according to the location, such as neurosurgery, ophthalmology or otorhinolaryngology for hemangiomas on the head and face, thoracic surgery and general surgery for those on the chest and abdomen, and orthopedics for those on the extremities. Most of the children go to a single department with a single treatment method, which may not be suitable for every child. Due to the improper choice of method, it often leads to delay, and even leads to disfigurement or limb dysfunction. Our plastic and burn surgery department treats hemangioma from head to foot as a whole, and can develop reasonable and individualized treatment plans according to the age, type, location, size and growth rate of the child. A complete hemangioma treatment system has been developed, including freezing, drugs, surgery, and advanced laser and interventional treatments. A single treatment tool is often ineffective in treating hemangioma, so combined treatment is the direction of hemangioma treatment. In plastic surgery, the treatment of hemangioma is based on cure, and the perfection of treatment effect is pursued, and the normal form and function of the local organs and tissues of the children should be preserved to the maximum extent, especially for the hemangioma of head, face, neck and chest. The currently recognized 595 pulsed fuel laser provides a minimally invasive, scarless and almost perfect treatment option for the treatment of nevus and superficial strawberry hemangioma. In the past, there was no effective treatment for some special areas and larger spongy or trapezius hemangiomas except surgery, but traditional surgical treatment is highly invasive and often disabling especially in the limbs, while the hemangioma interventions developed in recent years can successfully and perfectly solve this problem. For true hemangioma (strawberry hemangioma), some children do have the possibility of receding, but it is impossible to predict when and whether it will completely recede.