Malformation, arteriovenous (AVM) definition - medical term
An arteriovenous malformation (AVM)
is a congenital disorder (one present at birth) of blood vessels in the brain, brainstem,
or spinal cord that is characterized by a complex, tangled web of abnormal arteries
and veins connected by one or more fistulas (abnormal communications).
T he AVM has no capillary bed of its own and the fistulas in the AVM permit high-speed,
high-flow shunting of blood from the arterial to the venous side of the circulation.
This shunting causes low blood pressure (hypotension) in the arterial vessels feeding
the AVM and neighboring areas of the brain that they normally supply with blood.
AVMs typically cause problems before the age of 40. The most common symptoms
of AVM include hemorrhaging (bleeding), seizures, headaches, and neurological problems
such as paralysis or loss of speech, memory, or vision. The frequency of hemorrhage
in various series ranges from 30-82%. AVM rupture accounts for 2% of all strokes.
There are three general forms of treatment for AVM:
Surgery
, which is the best-known and longest-standing treatment for
AVM. Surgery for an AVM involves identifying the margins of the malformation,
ligating (tying off) or clipping the feeder arterial vessels, obliterating the
draining veins, and removing or obliterating the nidus (the nest) of the AVM.
Endovascular occlusion
, which involves closing off the vessels of
the AVM by one of various nonsurgical means. Catheters can deliver agents to
block the blood vessels that include permanent balloons, thrombosing (clogging)
coils, sclerosing (hardening) drugs, and fast-acting embolization glue (embolization
is often used before surgery).
Radiosurgery
, which involves focusing multiple radiation beams on
the AVM so as to injure and thrombose (clog) the AVM. The effect of radiosurgery
takes weeks to months to become fully manifest. A real danger of radiosurgery
is damage to neighboring nervous system tissue, normal brain (or spinal cord)
tissue around the AVM. Therefore, radiosurgery is usually reserved for AVMs
that are relatively small (less than 3 cm in diameter), situated so deep within
important brain tissue that surgery is hazardous, or have so many feeder arteries
that embolization is not feasible.
Most people (perhaps 80% or more) with AVMs never experience problems due to
them. However, AVMs that hemorrhage can lead to serious neurological problems, and
sometimes death.
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