|
11.
17-APRIL-2007 UMAR AHMAD ARAFEH 38 YEARS
ARTERIO-VENOUS MALFORMATION OF MIDEOBASAL FRONTAL LOBES
WITH MAIN FEEDERS FROM THE LEFT PERICALLOSAL ARTERY AND
NIDUS IN THE LEFT FRONTAL LOBE: PART ONE



Anamnesis
 |
The patient a Syrian citizen, came to the
clinic 14-April-2007 complaining slight
headache bifrontal in localization with
bilateral anosmia. |
 |
The patient got sudden loss
of consciousness 15-February-2007 and
CT-scan performed at that time, showed massive
SAH with heamatoma both mediobasal frontal
lobes, more the right with massive IVH. The
patient recovered gradually and carotid
angiography done 01.March-2007 showed
arteriovenous malformation with wide spread
feeders both frontal lobes mediobasal in
localization with main feeders coming from the
left pericallosal artery and a nidus scattered
in the left frontal lobe. |
 |
MRI of the brain and MRA were
performed later confirming the presence of the
nidus in the left frontal lobe. |
 |
On examination: The patient
had only anosmia both sides with headache
fronto-temporal area. He had several attacks of
convulsions. The patient is right handed. Slight
weakness of the right upper limb without sensory
deficit. |
 |
The patient was given the
options about intravascular embolisation or
coiling or direct surgery and the pros and cons
were discussed and he preferred direct surgery. |
 |
Bifrontal flap was created
and bilateral subfrontal approach was achieved.
No trail was directed to preserve the olfactory
tracts since they were damaged during the
primary insult. Massive feeders were originating
from the left side of the falx cerebri at the
crista Galli. They were coagulated and bisected
by sharp microscissors. |
 |
Interhemispheric approach was
done and proceeded down, during which many
feeders coming from the right mediobasal and the
right pericallosal artery and the falx cerebri
anterior third. |
 |
Dissection was continued
until the anterior communicating artery complex
was identified and the pericallosal arteries
were identified. The right pericallosal artery
had no major suppliers to the AVM, in the
contrary the left pericallosal artery had two
major feeders supplying it, which needed
Yasargil clips small size straight Ausculap
brand. |
 |
The arterialized veins
regained normal appearance and check for
overflow phenomenon was negative after clipping
of the major feeders. Inspection of the nidus
gave the impression, that there still present
another feeders, for what the nidus in the left
frontal lobe was removed and the small secondary
feeders were coagulated and bisected sharply.
The nidus was sent for investigation. |
 |
The dura was closed
water-tight and the frontal sinuses were
tamponed by muscle and the bone flap returned in
place and routine closure of the wound. |
 |
Smooth postoperative recovery
and the patient sent to the ICU for observation. |
Comments:
 |
This arteriovenous
malformation is not suitable for Gamma knife,
neither endovascular maneuvers, because it had
plenty of feeders and and big nidus with high
flow type. |
 |
The best choice for this type
of arteriovenous malformation is direct surgery,
since the area is functionally is not
critical and the already damaged neural tissues
by the primary insult will exclude further
damage from the surgery. |

INTRACRANIAL VASCULAR MALFORMATIONS
Historical Background
Intracranial
arteriovenous malformations were studied and classified
as early as the mid-1800s (Luschka, 1854: Virchow.
1863). with the first surgical exposure of an
arteriovenous malformation by Giordano occurring about
three decades later in 1890. Fedor Krause attempted to
surgically eliminate an arteriovenous malformation by
ligating its feeding arteries in 1908 but Olivecrona
appear, to have been the first to actually completely
excise a cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVM) in
1932 and later a cerebellar AVM in 1938. Except at a
few major centers. however, an aggressive surgical
approach to the larger examples of these lesions have
awaited the major technological advances of neurological
surgery, neuroradiology, and neuroanesthesia during the
past several decades.
Embryology of
Arteriovenous Malformations
Arteriovenous
malformation of the brain are congenital lesions most
likely developing during the late somite stages of the
fourth week of embryonic life and almost certainly no
later than the eighth week. The primary pathologic
lesion consists of one or more persisting direct
connections between the arterial inflow and venous
outflow without an intervening capillary bed.
Early in the third week
of embryonic life, cells (angioblasts) begin to
differentiate from the mesoderm, forming small,
syncytial islands. These small clumps of syncytial cells
develop tiny sprouts that extend to interconnect the
cell groups, forming a syncytial plexus. Intercellular
clefts appear within the syncytial masses. These clefts
fuse to form the primitive vascular lumen. The syncytial
cells enveloping these clefts become the endothelium of
the new vessels. Proliferative growth of this
endothelium links the vascular lumina into a continuous
irregular endothelial vascular meshwork over the surface
of the developing brain. Further extension of the
primitive network, present over the developing
telencephalon of human embryos at 4 weeks of age, occurs
through endothelial sprouting.
Sabin has described a
fascinating alternative process for the development of
the primitive vascular plexus. She observed the
appearance of intracellular vacuoles which coalesced to
form the future vascular lumen, with the liquid of the
vacuole becoming the primitive plasma. According to this
schema, the first primitive vascular lumen is
embryologically an intracellular structure, with the
syncytial cell, containing these interconnected vacuoles
forming the primitive vascular endothelium.
The primordial vascular
plexus first differentiates into afferent, efferent, and
capillary components over the more rostral portion of
the embryonic brain. The more superficial portion of the
plexus forms larger vascular channels. eventually
evolving into the arteries and veins, with the deeper
portion resolving into the capillary component more
closely attached to the brain surface. Beginning
circulation to the brain appears around the end of the
fourth week of embryonic life. Arteriovenous
malformations arise from persistent direct connections
between the future arterial and venous sides of the
primitive vascular plexus, with failure to develop an
interposed capillary network .
During the sixth and
seventh weeks the third pair of aortic arches, together
with the dorsal aorta, transform into the primitive
internal carotid arteries, with the first and second
arches undergoing early involution. The vertebral
arteries arise from a longitudinal linkage of the
dorsal rami of the intersegmental arteries of the neck
during the fourth week. All the original proximal
intersegmental artery stalks except the most caudal one
atrophy, resulting in a longitudinal vessel taking
origin along with the subclavian from the sixth cervical
intersegmental artery . The vertebral artery establishes
communication with the internal carotids through the
basilar artery, which arises independently through the
consolidation of two longitudinal vascular channels
beneath the brain. This linkage is established by the
sixth week of fetal life. Between the sixth and eighth
week of fetal life, a compartmentalized brain, dural and
extracranial circulation has been established. By the
eighth week of fetal life the major venous sinus pattern
of the adult has begun to emerge.
Pathologic Classification
of Arteriovenous Malformations
The development of
cerebral angiography catalyzed interest in the study of
intracranial vascular anomalies, providing the first
major new insights into the pathophysiology of these
lesions. The first major classifications of intracranial
vascular malformations used extensively in the older
European literature, consisted of four overall
categories: (1) angioma cavernosum, (2) angioma
racemosum, (3) angioreticuloma and (4) angioglioma.
Angioma racemosum included the subheadings of (a)
telangiectasis, (b) Sturge-Weber syndrome, (c) angioma
racemosum arteriale, (d) angioma racemosum venosum. and
(e) arteriovenous aneurysm. The term "arteriovenous
aneurysm" corresponds to the current designation
"arteriovenous malformation."
In 1966 McCormick
proposed a more clinically oriented categorization into
five pathologic types: (1) telangiectasia, (2) varix,
(3) cavernous angioma, (4) arteriovenous malformation
and (5) venous angioma. Telangiectasias are capillary
angiomas, usually small and solitary and most frequently
occurring in the pons and the roof of the fourth
ventricle. They are only occasionally associated with
hemorrhage. A varix is usually quite small and is
occasionally invisible grossly, consisting of one or
more dilated veins not associated with an arteriovenous
shunt. These small lesions, found in either the
parenchyma or the leptomeninges, may be associated with
hemorrhage, occasionally massive. Cavernous angiomas are
dilated sinusoidal vascular anomalies varying in size or
diameter from 1 mm up to many centimeters and are
associated with hemorrhage as well as seizures. They
occur most often in the cerebrum but may occur in any
part of the central nervous system. Brain parenchyma is
absent between the sinusoidal vascular spaces. Calcium
deposition and hyalinization of the vessel walls are
common: spontaneous thrombosis of either part or all of
the lesion may occur. The blood in a cavernous angioma
is not arterialized. The term venous angioma defines a
malformation consisting entirely of veins not associated
with an arteriovenous shunt, though otherwise closely
resembling an arteriovenous malformation in gross
appearance.
The term arteriovenous
malformation, the primary topic here, refers to a
congenital maldevelopment of blood vessels, with
preservation of one or more primitive direct
communications between arterial and venous channels. The
malformations are found throughout the central nervous
system, occurring most commonly in the cerebral
hemispheres, with from 70 to 93 percent found in the
supratentorial structures in various reported series.
Arteriovenous malformations of the cerebral hemispheres
most frequently involve the distribution of the middle
cerebral arterial tree, followed in declining frequency
by those of the anterior and then the posterior cerebral
arteries. Hemispheral arteriovenous malformations can be
further subclassified into those involving either one or
a combination of the epicerebral, the transcerebral, and
the subependymal circulations.
The epicerebral
circulation consists of short perforating branches
arising from the small pial arteries on the cortical
surface and penetrating the cortex more or less at right
angles to the brain surface. They form a distinct
palisade of parallel short arteries of varying length,
supplying the superficial, middle, and deep layers of
the cortex. These slender cortical arteries show a
grapnel-like pattern of branching, spreading outward and
back upward toward the cortical surface as they
terminate in a capillary bed. The longer transcerebral
arteries (averaging 2 to 3 cm in length), traverse the
cortex to feed an elongated capillary mesh or plexus
paralleling the transcerebral arteries in the white
matter. The transcerebral arteries terminate in the
periventricular plexus.
Paralleling the arterial
pattern, the venous drainage of the epicerebral
circulation courses back outward to the veins on the
pial surface. The venous drainage of the transcerebral
arterial circulation is predominantly inward toward the
subependymal venous plexus of the lateral ventricles,
though anastomotic connections with and associated flow
to the epicerebral veins are also present.
Malformations
involving only the transcerebral arteries are not
visible on the cortical surface, although it is common
to see arterialized venous channels on the pial surface
of the cortex as a result of the anastomotic connections
between the transcerebral and epicerebral venous
drainages.
Pathology
The gross appearance of
an arteriovenous malformation is that of a tangled mass
of dilated tortuous vessels. Small areas of hemosiderin
staining and thickened, milky appearing pia-arachnoid
are common in the immediate vicinity of the lesion in
older patients. If the transcerebral circulation is
involved in the malformation, the lesion presents a
characteristic wedge-shaped appearance with the apex of
the wedge at the ependymal surface of the lateral
ventricle and the base of the wedge parallel to the
overlying cerebral convexity. There is a rare but
surgically very favorable group of arteriovenous
malformations limited entirely to the pial surface of
the brain stem.
Arteries emptying into
the malformation become passively enlarged with time due
to the high flow volume resulting from the abnormally
low peripheral resistance of the A-V shunt. The venous
system draining the shunt similarly undergoes
progressive enlargement with increasing tortuosity as a
result of the high flow volume and sustained increased
venous pressure produced by the A-V shunt. Atrophic
changes of the cortex and subcortical white matter in
the immediate vicinity of the malformation are also
common findings in older patients. Secondary changes
with time have been found in the arterial walls of the
feeding arteries in the immediate vicinity of the
malformation, with collagenous replacement of the normal
smooth muscle component of the media. Saccular aneurysms
are an associated finding in between 10 and 15 percent
of patients with arteriovenous malformations. Between 60
and 95 percent of these aneurysms occur on arteries
hemodynamically related to the arteriovenous
malformation.
The external carotid
artery may make a significant flow contribution to a
cerebral arteriovenous malformation and occasionally may
be the sole source of arterial inflow to the lesion.
Incidence: Age and Sex
Distribution
The cooperative study on
intracranial aneurysms and arteriovenous malformations
suggested that the frequency of intracranial
arteriovenous malformations is about one-seventh that of
saccular aneurysms. This would indicate that about 0.14
percent of the population harbor one of these lesions in
a given year. The majority of lesions become symptomatic
by the age of 40 and in most large series show no
predilection for either sex. Although occasional reports
of familial incidence are found in the literature, the
larger series show no familial or genetic
predisposition.
Clinical Features
In adult life the first
symptom of an arteriovenous malformation is usually
either a hemorrhage or a seizure, These two types of
presentation occur with about equal frequency, The
average age of onset for epilepsy as the initial symptom
is about age 25, with age 30 the corresponding figure
for hemorrhage. Patients with large arteriovenous
malformations are more than twice as likely to have
seizures in contrast to hemorrhage as their initial
symptom, whereas the reverse is found for small lesions.
The reported incidence of
headache from an arteriovenous malformation as an early
symptom before the onset of either seizures or a
hemorrhage range, from 5 to 35 percent. A pseudotumor
syndrome secondary to elevated venous sinus pressure
from large A-V shunts, particularly if the shunts are
near the torcular and transverse sinus, and
hydrocephalus as a sequelae to previously undiagnosed
small subarachnoid hemorrhages are less common as a
presenting feature. Arteriovenous malformations may
occasionally mimic a demyelinating disease or brain
tumor, particularly, when located in the brain stem or
deep basal ganglia. Intellectual deterioration tends to
occur with large AVMs in the older age groups. This
deterioration appears to be at least partially related
to a cerebral steal phenornenon.
In children. hemorrhage
is seven times more likely than a seizure to be the
initial presenting event. An additional common
presentation of an arteriovenous malformation in the
neonatal period is high-output left ventricular cardiac
failure. Detailed hemodynamic studies have shown that
right heart failure may evolve as an additional
complicating factor secondary to right side overload
from the left to right shunt.
The clinical course of an
arteriovenous malformation, apart from hemorrhage, is
usually one of slowly progressing symptomatology
referable to the site of the lesion. The mortality rate
from hemorrhage in the cooperative study was 10 percent
from the initial bleeding episode. 13 percent from a
second episode, and 20 percent from a third episode. The
risk of recurrent hemorrhage after an initial bleeding
episode is between 3.5 and 4.0 percent per year. The
risk of hemorrhage in a patient presenting with cerebral
seizures but with no known previous hemorrhage has been
variously reported as between 1 and 2.3 percent per
year. Forster et al. found. in a 15-year average
follow-up of 35 patients presenting with epilepsy alone,
a 17 percent mortality and 20 percent severe disability
secondary to hemorrhage. They further noted that if the
patient had had one hemorrhage, there was a 25 percent
risk of rebleeding over the next 4 years. If there had
been two previous hemorrhages, the risk for further
rebleeding was 25 percent within the year following the
most recent hemorrhage. A review of 137 patients treated
conservatively with a follow-up period ranging from a
minimum of 10 years to a maximum of 25 years found that
only 20 percent of the 137 were alive and well at the
end of the study. Thirty-seven patients either had died
or were severely incapacitated by the arteriovenous
malformation.
Vascular malformations
presenting during pregnancy are more likely to
rehemorrhage than those in the nonpregnant patients with
the frequency of rebleeding approaching that of saccular
aneurysms. The posthemorrhage mortality and morbidity
figures, however, remain significantly lower than those
for saccular aneurysms and comparable with those for the
nonpregnant individual. Surprisingly, the timing of
rebleeding does not appear to peak or parallel the
cardiovascular changes in pregnancy. The peak incidence
of hemorrhage from AVMs occurs between the fifteenth and
twentieth week of pregnancy as compared with the peak
incidence of aneurysm rebleeding between the thirteenth
and fourteenth week of gestation. Only 2 of 77 AVM
hemorrhages during pregnancy in this series occurred
during labor. Elective cesarean section at 38 weeks
gestation was thought to carry the smallest combined
risk to mother and child.
Occasional spontaneous
disappearance of intracranial arteriovenous
malformations has been reported, but this remains a very
rare occurrence.
Radiology
Cerebral angiography
continues to be the definitive study for the assessment
of intracranial vascular malformations.
Careful bilateral carotid
as well as vertebral angiography often demonstrates
unexpected crossover or collateral filling of AVMs and
is essential for adequate planning of therapy and
assessment of risks to the patient. Computed tomography
(CT) scanning or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have
become common screening techniques for the diagnosis of
vascular malformations. Angiographically occult AVMs
have been found using both imaging techniques.
Intracerebral hemorrhage enhancing on CT scan, even when
arteriography fails to demonstrate a vascular anomaly,
should raise the suspicion of the presence of a small
AVM. Neither CT nor MRI reveals the anatomic detail
necessary for surgical planning. They also do not
reliably disclose the presence of associated vascular
anomalies such as saccular aneurysms.
In a group of patients
with AVMs studied with unenhanced, enhanced, and 1-h
postcontrast CT scans, the precontrast scan was abnormal
in 81 percent of patients. 2% of patients showed a
venous angioma on the immediate postcontrast scan, which
was not apparent on either the precontrast or the 1-h
delayed scan. The 1-h delayed scan revealed one
angiographically occult, thrombosed AVM not seen on the
precontrast or immediate postcontrast scan. The 1-h
delayed scan also showed additional pathologic changes
in areas adjacent to the lesions shown on the
precontrast and immediate postcontrast scans. Delayed
high-contrast CT scanning was judged to show no
advantage as the routine screening procedure and, if
done as a sole procedure, might miss at least some
venous angiomas.
The "flow void" seen on
MRI of AVMs has become a useful, though not completely
accurate, technique for assessing the degree of
occlusion of AVMs after focused stereotactic radiation
therapy.
Indications for Operation
The role of surgery in
the clinical management of a given patient is based on a
composite of the probable natural history of the
patients future clinical course, the risk of surgical
management with particular reference to the patient's
required occupational or daily activities, and finally,
the patient's age. Patients in the older age group who
have seizures but who are otherwise neurologically
intact and without a previous history of hemorrhage have
comparatively a smaller cumulative risk of major
morbidity and mortality with continued conservative
management. An important factor in long-term planning
for the younger patient is the problem that seizure foci
secondary to AVMs tend to become progressively more
resistant to medical management with time. Although most
current surgical series show some reduction in seizure
tendency after malformation excision, extirpation of the
malformation more importantly may block the further
development of medically intractable seizure activity.
In the younger patient, as is discussed in more detail
below, the risk of mortality or major morbidity with
surgery using current techniques is competitive with the
10-year prognosis for lesions that have not bled, and is
better than the 5-year prognosis for malformations with
a previous history of at least one hemorrhage.
Malformations in areas of eloquent function are being
found increasingly amenable to a surgical approach, with
mortality or major morbidity risks of 10 percent or
less. Deep lesions involving the internal capsule,
thalamus, midbrain and lower brain stem are still
usually found to be inoperable in terms of acceptable
risks to neurological function.
Role of Embolization in
AVM Management
Embolization of larger
AVMs has become an important therapeutic adjunct to
their surgical management. To date, the large majority
of these lesions cannot be totally occluded by
embolization techniques. Embolization does, however,
permit a staged preoperative reduction in size of the
arteriovenous shunt, producing significant circulatory
readjustment and reducing the degree of hydraulic shock
resulting from the final occlusion of the fistula at the
time of surgical resection of the lesion. Embolization,
when practical, has largely replaced staged surgical
occlusion of the feeding arteries to achieve this
effect.
Embolic agents are
classified as either absorbable or nonabsorbable and as
either solid or fluid. Solid embolic agents have been
injected into the internal carotid or vertebral artery
feeding the malformation, relying on the high-volume
axial flow characteristics of the circulation to the AVM
to carry the solid particles into its nidus. This
technique is not satisfactory if the pellets, such as
nonabsorbable barium-impregnated silicone spheres, have
to leave the parent artery at a sharp angle to enter a
branching vessel, such as would be required for a pellet
entering the anterior cerebral artery from the internal
carotid artery.
Gelfoam, cut into 1 x 2
mm strips, impregnated with tantalum powder and soaked
in angiographic contrast material has been a common
absorbable solid embolic agent. Although this material
is relatively easy to handle. it has been more
unpredictable in producing occlusion on the arterial
side of the shunt and has no major advantages over
silicone spheres.
Fluid embolic agents that
have been employed have been nonabsorbable and of either
the bucrylate or silicone types.
Isobutyl-2cyanoacrylate (ICBA) is a prototypic material
of the bucrylate group. It is a rapidly polymerizing,
low-viscosity tissue adhesive which is made radiopaque
by adding tantalum powder. ICBA polymerizes rapidly on
contact with ionic solutions such as blood or normal
saline, while a 5% glucose solution will block
polymerization. Considerable skill and experience are
required in the use of this material. The speed of
polymerization and rate of injection must be finely
calculated to ensure that polymerization occurs on the
arterial side of the malformation. Distal migration of
this fluid into the major sinuses has occurred. If the
arterial inflow is not arrested by polymerization on the
arterial side of the shunt, sudden swelling and rupture
of the malformation with major hemorrhage may occur.
Bucrylate produces a foreign body giant cell reaction
with chronic inflammatory changes not only in the vessel
wall but also to a lesser degree in the adjacent brain
parenchyma. The long-term effects of this material are
not yet fully known, Occasional malformations have been
completely occluded with bucrylate, although the success
rate for total occlusion has not been high, There are
several additional technical problems in using this
material for occlusion of malformations in areas of
eloquent function, Arterial branches to normally
functioning eloquent cortex often depart from the parent
artery distal to the first arterial branches going to
the malformation. Total occlusion of the malformation
would, of necessity, require sacrificing these normal
branches, with potentially serious neurological
sequelae. Additionally, the hardened, noncornpressible
prongs of bucrylate within an incompletely occluded
malformation may significantly increase the difficulty
of subsequent safe separation and surgical removal of
the malformation from areas of critical function.
Silicone fluid mixtures
have occasionally been used instead of bucrylate. The
mixture consists of a silastic elastomer containing a
filler necessary for vulcanization. and a medical-grade
silicone fluid that acts as the diluent to the more
viscous Silastic elastomer. These two silicones are
mixed to the desired viscosity and then tantalum powder
is added to permit radiographic visualization. A
catalyst to produce vulcanization is required. The
Silastic is injected just before vulcanization occurs.
It has no adhesive properties, so that a complete
filling or cast of the vascular lumen is required.
After embolization with
attendant reduction in the sump effect of the AVM, some
patients have been noted to show improvement in
intellectual performance, suggesting the correction of
some degree of symptomatic cerebral steal. Wolpert et
al. found, however, that embolization had no long-term
effect on the progression of neurological symptoms or
signs and no effect on seizure frequency. Incomplete
occlusion of the malformation by embolization has not
reduced or modified the natural history of the lesion
with respect to hemorrhage.
In 1971, Serbinenko
reported the use of detachable flowdirected balloons on
the tips of catheters threaded into the proximal vessels
to the malformation. This technique has been a key
factor in permitting selective catheterization of these
vessels for the injection of embolic agents but has not
been a satisfactory therapeutic occlusive maneuver in
and of itself.
Operative Management
Preoperatively, the
patient is placed on an anti epileptic to minimize the
risk of seizures during the early postoperative period
of cerebral vasocongestion and cerebral swelling, even
if the patient has no previous history of cerebral
seizures. Serum antiepileptic levels are checked
immediately before surgery to ensure that adequate
antiepileptic levels are present. Dexamethasone is
started 36 to 48 h preoperatively to help stabilize
capillary membrane permeability during the early
postoperative interval of hydraulic shock and local
tissue reaction to surgical manipulation.
If the malformation lies
in or immediately adjacent to the expected location of
the motor cortex or major speech centers, the surgical
procedure may be carried out under local anesthesia with
cortical mapping to ensure accurate localization of the
areas of eloquent function and to permit the testing of
these functions serially throughout the removal of the
malformation. In this latter situation, temporary clips
are placed on the arterial feeders immediately proximal
to the malformation, followed by function testing. The
temporary clips are then replaced with permanent ones if
no functional impairment has ensued.
Surgical resection should
always be performed under magnification with appropriate
microsurgical instrumentation. The dissection plane
follows along the immediate margin of the malformation
in the thin, gliotic nonfunctional zone between the
malformation and the adjacent cortex and white matter.
Particular care must be taken in occluding the small,
thin-walled endothelial tubules composing the
transcerebral venous drainage. These vessels are
extremely fragile and, if torn, back-bleed profusely due
to the increased venous pressure in the subependymal
venous plexus from the A-V shunt. It is essential to
avoid pursuing these vessels if unacceptable
neurological deficit is to be avoided. Temporary
placement of small fluffy cotton pledgets, accompanied
by surgeon patience and by moving on to another area of
the removal, will normally secure hemostasis of these
individual venous bleeding points. Careful positioning
of the head so that the major intracranial venous
drainage is above heart level is a major factor in
reducing venous congestion and attendant blood loss.
Selective identification
and occlusion of the arterial inflow to the lesion with
protection of the venous drainage as long as possible is
important, although Malis advocates using one of the
draining veins as a 'handle" and a guide to resection
when several major draining wins are present. Major
reduction in venous outflow before interruption of the
arterial inflow must be avoided if malformation rupture
with massive bleeding is to be avoided. High-contrast
visual dye can be injected intra-arterially to aid in
the identification of the feeding arteries to the
malformation if the vascular tangle of the malformation
makes selective identification of the arterial inflow
otherwise difficult. Significant fragility of the lesion
persists down to the very end of the resection, making
it essential that neither fatigue nor impatience results
in a rush or hurry to complete the final stages of the
removal.
A
grid technique of localization of cortical function for
a malformation lying in or adjacent to the central areas
has been proposed by Kune. This technique presupposes a
consistent pattern of cortical function with reference
to standard anatomic landmarks. Experience with cortical
mapping unfortunately has revealed significant deviation
in location from the more common patterns of cortical
function around the margins of arteriovenous
malformations, especially with respect to speech
localization. Modern techniques of anesthesiology have
made a major contribution to increasing the safety of
the surgical approach to,. and manipulation of these
lesions. Moderate hypotension during critical periods of
surgical resection is well tolerated, even under local
anesthesia and does not interfere with patient alertness
and function testing. The general anesthesia technique
of jet ventilation can also essentially eliminate brain
movement secondary to respiration.
Preliminary experience
with surgical lasers used on intracranial vascular
lesions has appeared in the literature. At present, the
lasers seem to have limited application to the surgery
of AVMs. This is particularly true of the CO2
laser, which has relatively poor vessel coagulation
ability because of its extremely shallow depth of
penetration. The CO2 laser tends to punch
holes in the walls of larger vessels. The neodymium:YAG
laser is more efficient in achieving hemostasis due to
its greater depth or penetration. However, this latter
laser type also is not effective in providing adequate
hemostasis in dealing with the very thin-walled
endothelial tubes of the engorged transcerebral
circulation The neodymium:YAG laser appear, to provide
adequate vascular occlusion when contractile elements
are a significant component of the vessel walls being
treated with the laser.
Gentle handling of the
arteries proximal to the lesions is essential,
particularly in the posterior fossa where proximal
propagation of clot from the point of arterial occlusion
can result In a disastrous outcome for an otherwise
technically satisfactory surgical excision. After
completion of the resection, the patient's blood
pressure should be brought to normal levels and the
operative field observed carefully to ensure that
hemostasis is complete. Feeding arteries of 1 mm or
larger must be securely clipped, if delayed
postoperative hemorrhage is to be consistently avoided.
Bipolar coagulation alone for these larger vessels is
not adequate.
Postoperatively, the
patient is nursed with the head of the bed elevated 30
to 40 degrees to maintain optimal venous outflow. It is
helpful to maintain the systolic blood pressure between
90 to 110 mmHg. using a trimethaphan camsylate drip, to
minimize the effects of hydraulic shock and attendant
hyperperfusion around the margins of the resection
during the first 24 h postoperatively. Crystalloids are
restricted in order to produce a mild dehydration, with
the goal of a serum osmolarity between 295 and 305.
Blood volume is maintained with colloid administration.
Dexamethasone is continued postoperatively for 8 to 10
days and is then rapidly tapered. Postoperative
angiography is essential to confirm that complete
removal of the malformation has been achieved.
Results
The type of patient
screening before surgical referral as well as the
aggressiveness of the consulting neurological and
neurosurgical units are obvious factors in reported
results. In larger series in which over 60 percent of
all patient, referred underwent surgical extirpation of
the lesions, a mortality rate ranging from 7 to 14
percent is found. The widespread use of the surgical
microscope and the staged preoperative embolization of
the lesions are major factor, in the improving mortality
and morbidity statistics. Surgical mortality rates now
appear to compare favorably with the long-term mortality
rates of these lesions managed conservatively in the
younger patient. More information regarding the quality
of postoperative survival, as compared to the quality of
life with conservative management. is needed, In the few
instances where this information is beginning to appear,
preliminary indications are that the long-term quality
of life is more favorable when surgical extirpation of
the lesion has been carried out.

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