DURAL ARTERIOVENOUS MALFORMATIONS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

DURAL ARTERIOVENOUS MALFORMATIONS

Description:

Plexiform arteriovenous fistulae with the nidus of AV shunting totally ... Intraoperative angiography. Intraoperative embolization. Evoked potential monitoring ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:373
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: issam
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: DURAL ARTERIOVENOUS MALFORMATIONS


1
DURAL ARTERIOVENOUS MALFORMATIONS
  • Issam A. Awad, MD, MSc, FACS, MA(hon)
  • Professor of Neurosurgery
  • Evanston Northwestern Healthcare
  • Feinberg School of Medicine
  • Northwestern University
  • Evanston, Illinois

2
Lesion Definition
  • Plexiform arteriovenous fistulae with the nidus
    of AV shunting totally within the dural leaflet
  • Fed by pachymeningeal arteries or dural branches
    of brain or scalp arteries
  • Drained by adjacent dural sinuses, or retrograde
    through leptomeningeal veins

3
DAVM Pathoanatomy and Pathophysiology
  • Venous hypertension in dural leaflet
  • Dural sinus outflow restriction/occlusion
  • Retrograde (leptomeningeal) venous drainage
  • Secondary sequelae of parenchymal venous
    hypertension

4
DAVM Pathoetiology
  • Sinus occlusion (congenital or acquired)
  • Trauma (blunt, penetrating, surgical)
  • Hypercoagulable states (including neoplasia,
    inflammation, etc)

Angiogenesis
5
DAVM Lesion Progression
  • Dural leaflet AV shunting
  • Pachymeningeal arterial recruitment
  • Retrograde venous drainage, variceal/aneurysmal
    change

6
DAVM Natural History
  • Clinical presentation related to lesion location
  • Aggressive symptoms (hemorrhage, focal neurologic
    deficits, seizures, etc.) solely related to
    leptomeningeal venous drainage
  • Progression, spontaneous resolution highly
    unpredictable (cavernous sinus DAVMs notable for
    spontaneous resolution)

7
Galenic DAVM Spontaneous Resolution
At Birth
At 1 Year
8
DAVM Symptoms Lesion Location and Pattern of
Drainage
  • Flow symptoms, cranial neuropathy
  • Ocular or intracranial hypertension
  • Focal neurologic symptoms, myelopathy, seizures
  • Hemorrhage
  • Aggressive Symptoms

9
DAVM Features Associated with Aggressive
Neurologic Course
  • RETROGRADE LEPTOMENINGEAL
  • VENOUS DRAINAGE
  • Pial drainage, Galenic drainage, Venous varices

Awad et al. 1989
10
DAVM Location and Aggressive Clinical Course
Awad et al. 1990
11
DAVM Classification Location and Venous Drainage
12
DAVM Management Strategies
  • Expectant and
  • symptomatic treatment--
  • surveillance for progression,
  • aggressive features
  • Transarterial embolization-- palliative,
    preparatory, definitive (slow polymerization)
  • Transvenous embolization-- pathologic segment
  • Surgery-- disconnection of leptomeningeal venous
    drainage, coagulation/excision/isolation of
    pathologic dural leaflet/sinus segment
  • Stereotactic Radiosurgery-- 18-24 months delayed
    effect (interval risk)

13
DAVM Surgical Adjuncts
  • Stereotactic navigation
  • (CTA Guidance)
  • Skull base exposures
  • Intraoperative angiography
  • Intraoperative embolization
  • Evoked potential monitoring

14
Cavernous sinus DAVMs
  • Painful ophthalmoplegia, red eye, bruit, visual
    loss
  • Spontaneous resolution, progression of eye
    symptoms, development of cortical (Sylvian)
    venous drainage
  • Tx-- transvenous obliteration (endovascular,
    open), transarterial preparation, radiosurgery,
    open surgery for leptomeningeal venous drainage
    or access to cavernous sinus

15
Cavernous Sinus DAVM Surgical Access for
Transvenous Obliteration
16
Superior Sagittal Sinus, Torcular DAVM
  • Venous outflow obstruction, papilledema
  • Cortical venous drainage, focal symptoms,
    hemorrhage
  • Tx.-- transarterial embolization, surgical
    disconnection, radiosurgery, palliative tx. of
    papilledema

CSF diversion radiosurgery
Surgical disconnection
17
Superior Sagittal Sinus DAVMPreparatory
Transarterial Embolization and Surgical
Disconnection
Transarterial embolization
Surgical disconnection
18
Anterior Falx (Ethmoidal) DAVM
  • Silent clinically until aggressive neurologic
    symptoms
  • Difficult, risky to embolize
  • Relatively easy to treat surgically
  • Radiosurgery option

19
Tentorial Incisural DAVM
  • Silent clinically or neighborhood symptoms (tic,
    bruit, etc.)
  • High frequency of aggressive neurologic symptoms
    (Galenic drainage)
  • Difficult to cure with embolization alone
  • Open surgery effective, subtemporal or
    pre-sigmoid transpetrous approach
  • Radiosurgery option

20
Transverse-Sigmoid (Lateral Tentorial) DAVM
  • Often presents with bruit as only initial symptom
  • Natural course dependant on leptomeningeal venous
    drainage
  • Treatment options individualized

21
CTA Guided Stereotactic Disconnection of
Transverse Sinus DAVM
22
Transverse-Sigmoid DAVM Palliative Embolization
and Radiosurgery
23
Transverse-Sigmoid (Petrosal) DAVM Unusual
Cure with Transarterial Embolization Alone
Glue embolization with slow polymerization
24
Transverse-Sigmoid (Petrosal) DAVM
Recanalization after Transvenous embolization
Surgical excision disconnection of coiled
sinus segment
Recurrence at edge of coil
Recurrence in wall of occluded sinus
25
Clival, Foramen Magnum DAVM
  • Frequent caudal leptomeningeal venous drainage
  • Brainstem symptoms or myelopathy (masquerade as
    spinal DAVM)
  • Tx.-- embolization, surgical disconnection
    (transcondylar, presigmoid approaches)

26
DAVMs A Strategic Approach
  • Understand lesion pathoanatomy
  • Screen and watch for aggressive features
  • Consider all management options, modalities,
    limitations, risks
  • Individualize treatment
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com