Coarctation of the aorta accounts for about 8% of all congenital heart diseases. It usually presents in infancy or later in the third decade depending on its severity. It has a wide spectrum varying from an asymptomatic presentation to cardiac and extracardiac manifestations with neurological complications. Coarctation presenting as a spinal complication is extremely rare. We describe a case of coarctation detected on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a 40-year-old man with an uncommon presentation mimicking a spinal arteriovenous malformation (AVM). To our knowledge, coarctation presenting with a spinal manifestation, resembling an AVM is rare, and has not been reported to date.
Lipofibromatous hamartomas are rare benign tumors presenting in the third and fourth decades with a predilection for the upper extremity. We describe an unusual presentation of lipofibromatous hamartoma occurring in a one month old female child, where the lesion showed MR findings resembling that of a vascular malformation.
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