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Amazing Regression of Hemagiomas Using Propranolol

Amazing Regression of Hemagiomas Using Propranolol 

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  #1  
01-10-2010, 11:16 AM
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Amazing Regression of Hemagiomas Using Propranolol

Hemangiomas of infancy are the most common tumor of infancy. They typically appear within a few weeks after birth and peak within three months. Hemagiomas are more common in girls than boys, more common in white than other races, and more common in preemies. Most of these lesions are innocuous and regress without treatment. Up to 75% shrink to insignificance by the time the child reaches school age. However, 5-10% of the lesions that will ulcerate during the rapid growth phase in the first 6 months of life. Ulceration is the most common reason for referral to specialists, and may be associated with pain, bleeding, infection, disfigurement, and scarring.
Panel A shows the patient at 9 weeks of age, before treatment with propranolol, after 4 weeks of receiving systemic corticosteroids (at a dose of 3 mg per kilogram of body weight per day for 2 weeks and at a dose of 5 mg per kilogram per day for 2 weeks).

Panel B shows the patient at 10 weeks of age, 7 days after the initiation of propranolol treatment at a dose of 2 mg per kilogram per day while prednisolone treatment was tapered to 3 mg per kilogram per day. Spontaneous opening of the eye was possible because of a reduction in the size of the subcutaneous component of the hemangioma.

Panel C shows the patient at 6 months of age, while he was still receiving 2 mg of propranolol per kilogram per day. Systemic corticosteroids had been discontinued at 2 months of age. No subcutaneous component of the hemangioma was noted, and the cutaneous component had considerably faded. The child had no visual impairment.

Panel D shows the child at 9 months of age. The hemangioma had continued to improve, and the propranolol treatment was discontinued.

Christine Léauté-Labrèze, M.D., of Bordeaux Children’s Hospital, and colleagues used the drug to treat two infants with heart disease (one with cardiomyopathy, the another with increased cardiac output) who just happened to also have hemangiomas. Unexpectedly, the lesions began to fade. They then used propranolol on nine other children with hemangiomas with similar success.

Johns Hopkins researchers have developed a protocol for the beta-blocker as a first-line treatment for the skin disorder. Propranolol could replace or supplement steroids such as prednisone which are often used currently. The children receive 1 mg/kg of propranolol on the first day, divided over three doses, and 2 mg/kg — also divided in thirds — after that.

Prednisone use carries the side effects of growth retardation, elevated blood sugars, and reduced resistance to infection.

Propranolol has side effects that include hypotension and hypoglycemia, but these are short-lived.

So far, Dr. Cohen and Katherine Puttgen, M.D., also at Johns Hopkins, say they have treated 20 patients with propranolol. Working with cardiologists, they decided to hospitalize the infants for the first two days of treatment to monitor for possible side effects such as hypotension or hypoglycemia. (They have seen none so far.)

Dr. Léauté-Labrèze, and colleagues reported that they are applying for a patent for the use of beta- blockers in infantile capillary hemangiomas.
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  #2  
01-10-2010, 11:03 PM
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Re: Amazing Regression of Hemagiomas Using Propranolol

Wow, that is just phenomenal! I hope they're able to get their patent on the thing!
  #3  
01-11-2010, 04:18 PM
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Re: Amazing Regression of Hemagiomas Using Propranolol

Damn, I were hoping on some injury including Propane and lol.. Damn I need to read before I click
  #4  
01-11-2010, 06:50 PM
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Re: Amazing Regression of Hemagiomas Using Propranolol

Outstanding for the little ones!
  #5  
01-12-2010, 09:39 AM
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Re: Amazing Regression of Hemagiomas Using Propranolol

Its nice to see something like this. Its kinda a gore pallet cleanser.
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