Abstract
In cases of cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVM) in which perforators are involved as feeder, hemostasis is difficult during surgical removal and postoperative hemorrhage may develop. If possible, presurgical embolization should be performed. However, when the anterior choroidal artery (AChA) is the feeder, the risk of embolization is particularly high, and there are few reports describing this situation. Authors report the treatment results of five cases of AVM in which a single operator performed presurgical embolization through the AChA and describe the technique with a review of the literature. Of the five total cases (three men and two women; average age was 43.4 years [28-68 years]), one case presented with hemorrhage, two with epilepsy, the other ones with headache and trigeminal neuralgia, respectively. The lesions were located in the frontal lobe in one case and in the temporal lobe in four cases. On the Spetzler-Martin (SM) grading scale, four cases were grade III and one was grade IV. The eloquent area was involved within the nidus in four cases. Multimodal treatment was planned because all cases were high-grade AVM. Authors thought that performing presurgical embolization through the AChA would reduce the overall risk of treatment and performed the presurgical embolization. The embolization was possible in all cases, and the AVM was not angiographycally visible through the AChA in three cases. The blood flow through the AChA was reduced in two cases. All cases were awake immediately after embolization and no case had neurological symptom after embolization. CT or MRI after embolization revealed asymptomatic infarction in two cases. The AVM was removed safely without difficulty including hemostasis. In this series, there were no morbidity and embolization was performed relatively safely. Embolization through the AChA was suggested to be an effective treatment, but careful consideration is required in each individual case.
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