J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  1992 Jul;21(7):873-878.

An Aneurysmal Dilatation of Cervical Intramedullary Arteriovenous Malformation: Case Report

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, Chonnam University Medical School, Kwangju, Korea.

Abstract

A 14-year-old girl presenting with sudden onset of headache, neck pain, and quadriparesis was found to have a vascular lesion in the upper cervical cord(C2-C4) by the initial MRI examination. Vertebral angiography revealed a high-flow arteriovenous malformation which opacified rapidly and drained early. It was a direct spinal arteriovenous fistular consisted of a large aneurysmal dilatation 4x2.2x2.2 cm3 at the junction of a feeding artery and a draining vein. Superior anterior spinal artery and a mid-cervical radicular artery formed a common trunk to feed the lesion that drained entirely superiorly to the posterior fossa through a dilated draining vein. The intramedullary lesion was removed completely after surgical ligation of the feeding artery and draining vein through a posterior approach and myelotomy. She improved to the point of being able to walk alone and attended school one year after operation with acceptable posterior column signs. Spinal cord arteriovenous malformations are traditionally classified into three major categories:Type I, II, III. Our case seemed to fit to the new type:Type IV, direct spinal arteriovenous fistula, proposed by Heros(JNS 64:134-139, 1986).

Keyword

Spinal cord; Arteriovenous malformation; Arteriovenous fistula dilatation; Intramedullary

MeSH Terms

Adolescent
Aneurysm*
Angiography
Arteries
Arteriovenous Fistula
Arteriovenous Malformations*
Dilatation*
Female
Headache
Humans
Ligation
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Neck Pain
Quadriplegia
Spinal Cord
Veins
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