Memories of Childhood Brunereau, Laurent; Vinikoff, Catherine B. Sonier; Rouleau, Philippe
American journal of roentgenology (1976),
10/2001, Volume:
177, Issue:
4
Journal Article
To investigate why some patients with an intracranial dural arteriovenous fistula (DAVF) with spinal venous drainage have myelopathy and others do not.
We reviewed the clinical and radiologic data ...for 12 patients who had a DAVF with spinal venous drainage diagnosed at our institutions from 1982 to 1995.
Six patients had progressive spinal cord indications of disease (patients with myelopathy) and six others (patients without myelopathy) had cerebral indications (five had intracranial hemorrhage and one had a seizure). Cerebral angiography showed a posterior fossa DAVF with spinal venous drainage in all cases. The clinical presentation of DAVFs with spinal venous drainage was compared with the extent of the drainage. In patients without myelopathy, the spinal venous drainage exited the intradural canal via the cervical medullary-radicular veins and was therefore limited to the cervical perimedullary veins. In patients with myelopathy, no medullary-radicular vein was seen, and the venous drainage descended along the perimedullary veins of the entire spinal cord toward the conus medullaris.
We found an exact relation between clinical presentation and venous drainage of DAVFs with spinal venous drainage. Patients had no myelopathy when the venous drainage was limited to the cervical cord; myelopathy was present when the venous drainage descended toward the conus medullaris.
BACKGROUND
To evaluate clinical and MR features of de novo lesions (DNL) in the familial form of cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) in 40 patients belonging to 29 unrelated non-Hispanic families.
...METHODS
Forty patients followed up by serial cerebral MR examinations were included in this retrospective study. First and last available MR examinations were retrospectively analyzed and compared for each patient to diagnose DNL. Gradient-echo (GRE) sequences were performed in only 11 of the 40 patients and were not considered for this study. Incidence of DNL was evaluated in terms of lesions/patient-year. All DNL were characterized by their clinical and MR features (location, size, type). Type of CCM was determined according to the classification of Zabramski (1994). Patient groups with and without DNL were compared for sex, age, number of pre-existing CCMs, and follow-up.
RESULTS
Twenty-three DNL were recorded in 11 patients (27.5%) and the incidence was 0.2 lesions/patient-year (mean follow-up = 3.2 years). All but one DNL were asymptomatic. Twenty DNL were supratentorial and three were infratentorial. Mean diameter was 8 mm (2–35 mm). Six DNL were classified as type 1 (subacute hemorrhage), six as type 2 (hemorrhages and thromboses of varying ages) and 11 as type 3 (chronic hemorrhage with hemosiderin staining). No statistical difference between groups was found in terms of sex, age, or number of pre-existing CCMs. On the other hand, duration of follow-up was significantly longer in the group with DNL.
CONCLUSION
The occurrence of DNL seems to be a hallmark of the familial form of CCM in non-Hispanic families as well as in Hispanic families. Such DNL are usually asymptomatic and are mainly classified as type 3 (chronic hemorrhage with hemosiderin staining). Within the limits of the retrospective study design and potential selection bias introduced by the varying indications for MR scanning, it does seem that DNL may occur at any time in the lifespan of CCM patients, and occurrence does not seem to depend on age, sex, or the total number of pre-existing lesions.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NUK, OILJ, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK
35.
Understanding scans Thiesse, Philippe; Carretier, Julien; Vincent, Catherine ...
Bulletin du cancer
91, Issue:
4
Journal Article