Volume 82, Issue 1 pp. 51-58
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Spinal arteriovenous malformations: neurological aspects and results of embolization

C. Lundqvist

Corresponding Author

C. Lundqvist

Departments of Neurology, Health Care Research, Sahlgren Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden

Department of Neurology, Sahlgren Hospital, S-41345 Göteborg, SwedenSearch for more papers by this author
B. Berthelsen

B. Berthelsen

Departments of Neuroradiology, Gothenburg, Sweden

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M. Sullivan

M. Sullivan

Departments of Medicine, Gothenburg, Sweden

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P. Svendsen

P. Svendsen

Departments of Neuroradiology, Gothenburg, Sweden

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O. Andersen

O. Andersen

Departments of Neurology, Health Care Research, Sahlgren Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden

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First published: July 1990
Citations: 25

Abstract

Abstract Twenty consecutive patients with spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) were found to have either a progressive, remitting or remitting-progressive course of disease. A characteristic progressive neurological decline was observed in 11 patients with dural fistulas and a similar decline was seen in 5 of the 9 patients with intradural AVMs. In addition to paraparesis and mixed sensory disorder, which ascended to a level of about T10, areas with spared sensation were occasionally found below this level. All cases with this progressive longitudinal myelopathy showed radiological evidence of a dilated medullary venous plexus. All patients were treated by embolization with only a low frequency of complications. Follow-up data verified a significant improvement of motor and sensory function, mainly during the first year after embolization. Cases with progressive neurological decline (dural and intradural AVMs) stopped deteriorating or improved and cases with a history of acute incidents (intradural AVMs) probably run less risk of acute deterioration.

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