Management of spinal dural arteriovenous malformations

1989 ◽  
Vol 70 (6) ◽  
pp. 832-836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael K. Morgan ◽  
W. Richard Marsh

✓ Dura-based spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVM's) are being diagnosed with increasing frequency. The optimal management of such lesions remains a topic of discussion. In an effort to guide this discussion, the authors review their experience with 17 cases of spinal dural AVM treated between January, 1984, and July, 1987. All patients presented with a slowly progressive paraparesis. The abnormalities were initially identified on myelography and confirmed by selective spinal angiography. Fourteen patients underwent endovascular embolization as a primary treatment, and a total of 18 embolization procedures were performed. After all but two of these, obliteration was confirmed at angiography. Patients' symptoms improved following 15 or these procedures but early improvement was not sustained in 10 instances; patients were unchanged after two procedures and worse after one. Follow-up angiography was performed at varying intervals after 15 of the 18 procedures, and recanalization of the previously obliterated spinal dural AVM was demonstrated in 13 instances. Eight patients ultimately underwent surgical treatment of their dura-based spinal AVM. No patient suffered deterioration of symptoms following operation. While embolization may allow angiographic obliteration of a spinal dural AVM and early clinical improvement, for the majority of patients these are not sustained. The average time to treatment failure was 5 months. Newer embolization materials will be necessary to effect permanent treatment in many of these patients.

1983 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 471-478 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Cogen ◽  
Bennett M. Stein

✓ Few neurosurgeons have stressed the occurrence, manifestations, and resectability of intramedullary spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVM's). In six of 17 patients in the authors' series of operable spinal AVM's, the lesions had major intramedullary components. Three of these six patients presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage, and all had catastrophic neurological deficits which gradually improved. The hemorrhages appeared to originate from large venous varices lying adjacent to the intramedullary portion of the AVM. The mechanism explaining the sudden neurological deficit in the other three patients was presumed to be thrombosis within the venous varices associated with their AVM's. The reliability of the various radiographic procedures in identifying the intramedullary components of these AVM's is discussed. These malformations may be removed totally with a high degree of safety using microsurgical techniques. The postoperative course in this series of patients was gratifying in terms of improvement of neurological deficits. Postoperative angiography was not performed on all of these patients. However, the follow-up period averaged 5 years.


2000 ◽  
Vol 93 (supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 113-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Hung-Chi Pan ◽  
Wan-Yuo Guo ◽  
Wen-Yuh Chung ◽  
Cheng-Ying Shiau ◽  
Yue-Cune Chang ◽  
...  

Object. A consecutive series of 240 patients with arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) treated by gamma knife radiosurgery (GKS) between March 1993 and March 1999 was evaluated to assess the efficacy and safety of radiosurgery for cerebral AVMs larger than 10 cm3 in volume. Methods. Seventy-six patients (32%) had AVM nidus volumes of more than 10 cm3. During radiosurgery, targeting and delineation of AVM nidi were based on integrated stereotactic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and x-ray angiography. The radiation treatment was performed using multiple small isocenters to improve conformity of the treatment volume. The mean dose inside the nidus was kept between 20 Gy and 24 Gy. The margin dose ranged between 15 to 18 Gy placed at the 55 to 60% isodose centers. Follow up ranged from 12 to 73 months. There was complete obliteration in 24 patients with an AVM volume of more than 10 cm3 and in 91 patients with an AVM volume of less than 10 cm3. The latency for complete obliteration in larger-volume AVMs was significantly longer. In Kaplan—Meier analysis, the complete obliteration rate in 40 months was 77% in AVMs with volumes between 10 to 15 cm3, as compared with 25% for AVMs with a volume of more than 15 cm3. In the latter, the obliteration rate had increased to 58% at 50 months. The follow-up MR images revealed that large-volume AVMs had higher incidences of postradiosurgical edema, petechiae, and hemorrhage. The bleeding rate before cure was 9.2% (seven of 76) for AVMs with a volume exceeding 10 cm3, and 1.8% (three of 164) for AVMs with a volume less than 10 cm3. Although focal edema was more frequently found in large AVMs, most of the cases were reversible. Permanent neurological complications were found in 3.9% (three of 76) of the patients with an AVM volume of more than 10 cm3, 3.8% (three of 80) of those with AVM volume of 3 to 10 cm3, and 2.4% (two of 84) of those with an AVM volume less than 3 cm3. These differences in complications rate were not significant. Conclusions. Recent improvement of radiosurgery in conjunction with stereotactic MR targeting and multiplanar dose planning has permitted the treatment of larger AVMs. It is suggested that gamma knife radiosurgery is effective for treating AVMs as large as 30 cm3 in volume with an acceptable risk.


2000 ◽  
Vol 93 (supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 96-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jong Hee Chang ◽  
Jin Woo Chang ◽  
Yong Gou Park ◽  
Sang Sup Chung

Object. The authors sought to evaluate the effects of gamma knife radiosurgery (GKS) on cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) and the factors associated with complete occlusion. Methods. A total of 301 radiosurgical procedures for 277 cerebral AVMs were performed between December 1988 and December 1999. Two hundred seventy-eight lesions in 254 patients who were treated with GKS from May 1992 to December 1999 were analyzed. Several clinical and radiological parameters were evaluated. Conclusions. The total obliteration rate for the cases with an adequate radiological follow up of more than 2 years was 78.9%. In multivariate analysis, maximum diameter, angiographically delineated shape of the AVM nidus, and the number of draining veins significantly influenced the result of radiosurgery. In addition, margin radiation dose, Spetzler—Martin grade, and the flow pattern of the AVM nidus also had some influence on the outcome. In addition to the size, topography, and radiosurgical parameters of AVMs, it would seem to be necessary to consider the angioarchitectural and hemodynamic aspects to select proper candidates for radiosurgery.


1987 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 830-834 ◽  
Author(s):  
John L. Doppman ◽  
Giovanni Di Chiro ◽  
Andrew J. Dwyer ◽  
Joseph L. Frank ◽  
Edward H. Oldfield

✓ Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed on 12 patients with spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVM's). Six lesions were intramedullary, five were dural, and one was in a posterior extramedullary location. Serpentine filling defects similar to the classic myelographic findings were demonstrated within the high-signal cerebrospinal fluid on T2-weighted coronal scans. The intramedullary nidus was identified by MRI as an area of low-signal intensity within the cord in all six intramedullary AVM's. Neither the dural nor the posterior extramedullary lesions showed intramedullary components. It is concluded that MRI may noninvasively provide the initial diagnosis of a spinal AVM and distinguish intramedullary from dural and extramedullary lesions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 346-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitchell P. Wilson ◽  
Keith E. Aronyk ◽  
Thomas Yeo ◽  
Michael Chow ◽  
Jeffrey A. Pugh

Spinal arteriovenous malformations are rare in children, although perimedullary arteriovenous fistulas (PMAVFs) may account for up to 24% of spinal arteriovenous malformations in this age group. Reported presentations of PMAVFs have included progressive or acute myelopathic symptoms, pain, hematomyelia, and subarachnoid hemorrhage. No known reports of an unruptured PMAVF causing communicating hydrocephalus have been previously published. A 17-month-old girl presented to the authors' clinic with a 6-month history of back and leg pain, gait regression, constipation, and marked lumbar hyperlordosis due to a PMAVF. A brain MRI study also demonstrated advanced hydrocephalus. The patient underwent embolization with Onyx of 2 feeding arteries from the right L-1 and 1 feeding artery from the left L-1 lumbar arteries. Postembolization follow-up imaging demonstrated a reduction in size of the L-1 pedicles and no residual supply of the fistula. Three-year clinical follow-up showed normal bowel and bladder function with significant improvements in the patient's back pain, gait, and hyperlordosis. The patient's ventricular enlargement improved without direct management of her hydrocephalus. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of communicating hydrocephalus caused by an unruptured PMAVF. The authors postulate that the origin of hydrocephalus was either central venous hypertension caused by the high-flow fistula or a change in fluid dynamics reducing CSF resorption through arachnoid granulations in the lumbar region of the spinal cord. The exact role that spinal arachnoid granulations play in CSF resorption is not currently known. Regardless of pathogenesis, initial treatment should focus on management of the fistula with additional hydrocephalus management only when necessary.


1989 ◽  
Vol 71 (6) ◽  
pp. 805-809 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youichi Itoyama ◽  
Syouzaburou Uemura ◽  
Yukitaka Ushio ◽  
Jun-Ichi Kuratsu ◽  
Nobuhito Nonaka ◽  
...  

✓ The clinical course of 50 patients with conservatively treated intracranial arteriovenous malformations (AVM's) was followed, most of them for more than 5 years. The average follow-up period was 13.4 years. The initial symptom was intracranial bleeding in 29 patients (58%) and seizure in 15 patients (30%). Small and deep-seated AVM's were associated with a high incidence of bleeding; however, repeated hemorrhages were not necessarily indicative of a poor prognosis. Children younger than 15 years had a better prognosis than adults. There was no correlation between pregnancy and bleeding. In the hemorrhage group, the incidence of rebleeding was 6.9% in the 1st year after initial rupture, 1.91% per year after 5 years, and 0.92% per year after 15 years. The overall incidence of rebleeding was 34.5% in the hemorrhage group. Of the 50 patients, 37 (74%) had a good clinical outcome, four (8%) had a fair outcome, and four (8%) had a poor outcome; five patients died.


Author(s):  
Ji Y. Chong ◽  
Michael P. Lerario

Spinal vascular malformations are rare, with dural arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) accounting for the majority of the pathology. Unlike spinal arteriovenous malformations, which cause abrupt neurological change as a result of hemorrhage, spinal dural AVFs tend to result in a progressive myelopathy through venous congestion and cord edema. If diagnosed and treated early with endovascular embolization or microsurgery, some deficits may be reversible.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. E44-E44
Author(s):  
M Neil Woodall ◽  
Robert F Spetzler

Abstract Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) involving the conus medullaris have a unique angioarchitecture due to their involvement of the arterial basket of the conus medullaris, which represents an arterial anastomotic network between the anterior spinal artery (ASA) and posterior spinal arteries (PSAs) at the level of the conus medullaris.1 These lesions consist of a combination of a true AVM nidus, which is usually extramedullary, and direct shunts between the ASA, PSAs, and the venous system. Patients may present with radiculopathy, myelopathy, or subarachnoid hemorrhage.2 A 40-yr-old woman status post T11-L1 laminoplasty for resection of a ruptured conus AVM 6 yr prior presented with routine follow-up angiography suggestive of an arteriovenous fistula. She was counseled regarding treatment options including endovascular embolization and microsurgical ligation or resection, and she elected to proceed with surgical treatment. At the time of surgery, a recurrent AVM was noted. A 2-dimensional intraoperative video illustrates the microsurgical treatment of her recurrent conus AVM. The patient recovered well postoperatively. Spinal angiography demonstrated complete obliteration of the lesion. The patient experienced transient urinary retention that was self-limited but otherwise was without any new neurological deficit. Due to the retrospective nature of this report, informed consent was not required. Video used with permission from Barrow Neurological Institute, all rights reserved.


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 497-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hengwei Jin ◽  
Zhan Liu ◽  
Qing Chang ◽  
Chang Chen ◽  
Huijian Ge ◽  
...  

Objective Brainstem arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are rare lesions with a high risk of intracranial hemorrhage and are challenging to treat. We present our experience of endovascular embolization with Onyx in these aggressive lesions. Materials and methods Between 2007 and 2016, 13 patients with brainstem AVMs were embolized with Onyx at our center. Twelve patients presented with intracranial hemorrhage and one with headache. Retrospective examinations of patient demographics, clinical presentation, angiographic features, treatment modalities, postoperative complications and outcomes were carried out. Results The AVMs were in the midbrain in 10 patients (one anterior and nine posterior or dorsal), in the posterior pons in two and pontomedullary in one. Complete occlusion was achieved in three patients. Gamma knife radiosurgery was performed in six patients who were near-completely or partially embolized. Postoperative complications, including five cases of ischemia and one case of hemorrhage, resulted in four cases of neurological deterioration and two deaths. Clinical follow-up was obtained in 10 patients at a mean period of 45.2 months (range 3 to 93 months). During the follow-up, good clinical outcomes were observed in seven patients with posterior or dorsal midbrain AVMs, and one patient with a posterior pons AVM that was partially occluded died of intracranial hemorrhage. Conclusion Endovascular embolization for brainstem AVM with Onyx is a technical challenge and the reflux of Onyx may cause severe complications. Individualized treatment is needed based on the specific subtype of brainstem AVM.


1972 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 562-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. C. Forster ◽  
Ladislau Steiner ◽  
Sten Håkanson

✓ The quality of survival of 150 patients with arteriovenous malformations of the brain is presented. The mean period of follow-up was over 15 years. The surgically operated and conservatively managed groups are compared, a comparison that in the long run appears to favor the operated cases. The results are discussed and indications for surgery summarized.


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