Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery (Division of Neurosurgery), The Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network, The Brain Vascular Malformation Study Group, University of Toronto; Toronto, Canada
Abstract
The role of embolisation in the treatment of small (< 3cm) brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) has not been elucidated. We reviewed our experience using embolisation in the treatment of small AVMs and correlated a proposed grading system based on the angioarchitecture to the percentage obliteration achieved by embolisation. Eighty-one small AVMs in 80 patients were embolised from 1984 to 1999. The age range was from 3 to 72 years. The AVMs were given a score from 0 to 6 based on the angioarchitecture. The assigned scores were as follows: nidus (fistula = 0, < 1 cm = 1, 1–3 cm = 2), type of feeding arteries (cortical = 0, perforator or choroidal = 1), number of feeding arteries (single = 0, multiple = 2) and number of draining veins (single = 0, multiple = 1). Angiographic results based on percentage obliteration were grouped into three categories: complete, 66–99%, and 0–65%. The goal of embolisation was cure in 27 AVMs, pre-surgical in 23, pre-radiosurgery in 26, and elimination of an aneurysm in five. Embolisation achieved complete obliteration in 22 (27%) of the 81 AVMs. In the AVMs where the goal was cure, 19 (70%) of 27 were completely obliterated. In the AVMs with angioarchitecture scores of 0–2, 12 (86%) of 14 were cured, with scores of 3–4, 8 (34%) of 24 were cured and with scores of 5–6, 2 (4%) of 44 were cured. Embolisation resulted in transient morbidity of 5.0%, permanent morbidity of 2.5%, and mortality of 1.2%. There were no complications in AVMs with scores of 0–2. Embolisation is an effective treatment of small AVMs when the angioarchitecture is favourable (scores 0–2). This includes pure fistulas and AVMs with a single, pial, feeding artery.
Cited by
28 articles.
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