1. Selective arterial temporary flow arrest with balloons during transvenous embolization for the treatment of brain arteriovenous malformations: a feasibility study with MRI-monitored adverse events
- Author
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Christina Iosif, Jose Alberto Almeida Filho, Clara Esther Gilbert, Ali Nazemi Rafie, Suzana Saleme, Aymeric Rouchaud, and Charbel Mounayer
- Subjects
Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Feasibility Studies ,Brain ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,Embolization, Therapeutic ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Abstract
BackgroundThe technique of endovascular transvenous embolization for brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) has emerged in the last 8 years as a very promising therapeutic alternative for otherwise incurable cases. Selective temporary flow arrest during transvenous endovascular embolization (TFATVE) is a novel adaptation of our previously described transvenous approach, which employs hyper-compliant balloons intra-arterially for the selective occlusion of arterial feeders during ethylene vinyl copolymer (EVOH) injection, in order to reduce intra-nidal pressure and increase nidi occlusion rates.MethodsWe performed a feasibility study of the TFATVE technique between January 2016 and April 2020. Consecutive patients were included. All patients had at least one axial brain MRI or CT in the first 48 hours following intervention, and at least one brain MRI scan within the first postoperative month, in order to detect both silent and clinically evident adverse events. Patients’ demographics, angio-architectural characteristics, total injection and procedure times, angiographic and clinical outcomes were analyzed.Results22 patients underwent TFATVE during transvenous endovascular treatment of brain AVMs. Among them, 86.4% were high Spetzler-Martin’s grade. Good clinical outcome (modified Rankin Scale 90% of the cases at the end of the procedure and angiographic stability was achieved in all cases; 100% of the cases had angiographic cure at follow-up.ConclusionsTFATVE seems a safe and effective technique when conducted in carefully selected patients in highly specialized centers.
- Published
- 2021