Object: Intramedullary, or glomus, spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are rare vascular lesions amenable to resection with or without adjuvant embolization. The authors retrospectively reviewed the senior author's (R.F.S.'s) surgical series of intramedullary spinal AVMs to evaluate clinical and radiographic outcomes.
Methods: Detailed chart and radiographic reviews were performed for all patients with intramedullary spinal AVMs who underwent surgical treatment between 1994 and 2011. Presenting and follow-up neurological examination results were obtained and graded using the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) and McCormick Scale. Surgical technique, outcomes, complications, and long-term angiographic studies were reviewed.
Results: During the study period, 20 patients (10 males and 10 females) underwent resection of glomus spinal AVMs. The mean age at presentation was 30 ± 17 years (range 7-62 years). The location of the AVMs was as follows: cervical spine (n = 10), thoracic spine (n = 9), and cervicothoracic junction (n = 1). The most common presenting signs and symptoms included paresis or paralysis (65%), paresthesias (40%), and myelopathy (40%). Perioperative embolization was performed in the majority (60%) of patients. Pial AVM resection was performed in 17 cases (85%). Angiographically verified AVM obliteration was achieved in 15 patients (75%). At a mean follow-up duration of 45.4 ± 52.4 months (range 2-176 months), 14 patients (70%) remained functionally independent (mRS and McCormick Scale scores ≤ 2). One perioperative complication occurred, yielding a surgical morbidity rate of 5%. Three symptomatic spinal cord tetherings occurred at a mean of 5.7 years after AVM resection. No neurological decline was observed after endovascular and surgical interventions. No deaths occurred. Long-term angiographic follow-up data were available for 9 patients (40%) at a mean of 67.6 ± 60.3 months (range 5-176 months) following AVM resection. Durable AVM obliteration was documented in 5 (83%) of 6 patients.
Conclusions: Intramedullary AVMs may be safely resected with satisfactory clinical and angiographic results. The pial resection technique, which provides subtotal AVM nidus resection, effectively devascularized these lesions, as confirmed on postoperative angiography, without violating the spinal cord parenchyma, thereby potentially reducing iatrogenic injury.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2012.3.SPINE11982 | DOI Listing |
Neurol India
July 2024
Department of Surgery, Division of Neurosurgery, Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital, Kaohsiung Medical University, Taiwan.
Diseases
June 2024
Department of Human, Clinical and Radiological Anatomy, Medical University, 20-954 Lublin, Poland.
Contemporary literature lacks examples of intradural, extramedullary spinal glomangiomas. Moreover, glomus tumors in general are exceedingly rare among benign spinal tumors and are mostly located within epidural space or within intervertebral foramen, and only a few cases have been documented to date. This report provides a detailed analysis of the clinical presentation, imaging characteristics, surgical intervention, and pathological findings of a 45-year-old patient experiencing progressive locomotor deterioration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld Neurosurg
November 2023
Department of Neurosurgery, ARNAS Civico Di Cristina, Palermo, Italy.
Spinal intramedullary arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) can present with spinal hemorrhage. However, some of them occasionally can be the cause of angiographically negative intracranial subarachnoid hemorrhage, thus requiring a more comprehensive diagnostic approach to detect the possible source of bleeding. Nidal or arterial feeder aneurysms are widely considered high-risk rupture portions of the spinal AVM and recognized as a major cause of bleeding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld Neurosurg
July 2023
Department of Neurosurgery, Japanese Red Cross Medical Center, Tokyo, Japan.
Background: Intramedullary spinal arteriovenous malformation (ISAVM, glomus type) is a type of spinal cord arteriovenous malformation, which is a rare disease known often to have a complex vascular supply interfering with that of the spinal cord, and is in complex anatomical relations with cord structures and nerve roots. Though microsurgical and endovascular treatment has mainly been the standard options, in high-risk cases with these treatments, stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) might be the option of choice.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 10 consecutive patients with ISAVM who received SRT using CyberKnife at the Japanese Red Cross Medical Center (Tokyo, Japan) from January 2011 to March 2022.
Pak J Med Sci
January 2023
Prof. Dr. Abdul Sattar M. Hashim, PhD., M.D Neuro Surgery. Ex Prof JPMC, Medical Director, Neuro Spinal & Cancer Care Institute, Karachi, Pakistan.
Objective: Glomus jugulare tumor are benign vascular tumors and surgical resection is almost impossible. We have treated these tumors by Gamma knife radiosurgery and share our experience.
Methods: This study was conducted at the Neurospinal and Cancer Care Institute, Karachi from January 2010 to May 2020.
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