# Case Report: Airway obstruction as a fatal complication of infantile hemangioma in newborns: the eye cannot see what the mind does not know

**Authors:** Xiaoliang Liu, Li Ma, Fan Ma, JiaoJiao Wan, Huanrui Hu, Kaiyu Zhou, Fan Hu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fped.2025.1631906 · 2025-09-30

## TL;DR

A newborn with airway hemangiomas faced life-threatening breathing issues, and a new treatment approach helped resolve the problem.

## Contribution

This case report introduces transcatheter interventional sclerotherapy as a potential treatment for airway hemangiomas in newborns.

## Key findings

- Airway hemangiomas in newborns can cause severe respiratory failure without visible skin lesions.
- Transcatheter interventional sclerotherapy successfully resolved airway obstruction in this case.
- Propranolol remains a key treatment, but additional therapies may be needed for severe cases.

## Abstract

In newborns, infantile hemangiomas (IHs) in the airway can present with rare life-threatening complications associated with airway obstruction, even without cutaneous hemangioma.

Our female newborn exhibited stridor 1 day after her birth. Furthermore, 7 days after birth, she was admitted to the local hospital to receive phototherapy for neonatal jaundice. However, her stridor was not noted as being related to IH by the clinician during her hospitalization. She was transferred to our hospital at 14 days old because her stridor and condition deteriorated with severe breathlessness and respiratory failure. Computed tomography and flexible bronchoscopy identified obstructive airway IHs. Although a combination therapy of propranolol and corticosteroids was prescribed for 2 weeks, she still needed invasive mechanical ventilation. After a discussion by the multidisciplinary team, endoscopic resection was carried out to resolve her airway obstruction at 30 days old, but it failed. Finally, transcatheter interventional sclerotherapy successfully resolved her clinical conditions at 60 days old. She was discharged and received follow-up with propranolol treatment. Her clinical symptoms of airway IHs were completely resolved 1 year later.

Airway IHs can rarely present with life-threatening conditions associated with airway obstruction without cutaneous hemangioma in newborns. This case report highlights that propranolol is the cornerstone treatment for airway IHs. For the first time, our findings suggest that transcatheter interventional sclerotherapy can be a valid additional treatment option.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** propranolol (PubChem CID 4946)
- **Diseases:** infantile hemangioma (MONDO:0002407), respiratory failure (MONDO:0021113)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cutaneous hemangioma (MESH:D006391), breathlessness (MESH:D004417), stridor (MESH:D012135), neonatal jaundice (MESH:D007567), IH (MESH:C565524), IHs (MESH:C535860), respiratory failure (MESH:D012131), Airway obstruction (MESH:D000402)
- **Chemicals:** propranolol (MESH:D011433)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12518250/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12518250