Surgical Resection of Deep-Seated Arteriovenous Malformations Through Stereotactically Guided Tubular Retractor Systems: A Case Series

Author:

Achey Rebecca1,Kashkoush Ahmed1,Potter Tamia2ORCID,Davison Mark1,Moore Nina Z.13,Kshettry Varun R.13,Bain Mark13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurological Surgery, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, USA;

2. Case Western Reserve School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio, USA;

3. Cerebrovascular Center, Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, USA

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in the subcortical and/or periventricular regions can cause significant intraventricular and intracranial hemorrhage. These AVMs can pose a unique surgical challenge because traditional, open approaches to the periventricular region require significant cortical/white matter retraction to establish sufficient operative corridors, which may result in risk of neurological injury. Minimally invasive tubular retractor systems represent a novel, feasible surgical option for treating deep-seated AVMs. OBJECTIVE: To explore 5 cases of NICO BrainPath-assisted resection of subcortical/periventricular AVMs. METHODS: Five patients from a single institution were operated on for deep-seated AVMs using tubular retractor systems. Collected data included demographics, AVM specifications, preoperative neurological status, postoperative neurological status, and postoperative/intraoperative angiogram results. RESULTS: Five patients, ranging from age 10 to 45 years, underwent mini-craniotomy for stereotactically guided tubular retractor-assisted AVM resection using neuronavigation for selecting a safe operative corridor. No preoperative embolization was necessary. Mean maximum AVM nidal diameter was 8.2 mm. All deep-seated AVMs were completely resected without complications. All AVMs demonstrated complete obliteration on intraoperative angiogram and on 6-month follow-up angiogram. CONCLUSION: Minimally invasive tubular retractors are safe and present a promising surgical option for well-selected deep-seated AVMs. Furthermore, study may elucidate whether tubular retractors improve outcomes after microsurgical AVM resection secondary to mitigation of iatrogenic retraction injury risk.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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