The case records of 191 patients with a cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVM) were reviewed to determine bleeding characteristics of these lesions. Possible influences of age, sex, the location and size of the AVM, type of initial hemorrhage, and condition of the patients were analyzed. Of these 191 patients, 102 had a single hemorrhage, 32 had a recurrent hemorrhage, and 57 never bled. The follow-up period for patients with an unruptured AVM was a mean of 4.8 years and a maximum of 31 years; for those with a ruptured AVM, the mean was 2 years, and the maximum 37 years. Size of the AVM was significantly related to the risk of first hemorrhage. The average yearly risk for first hemorrhage was between 2% and 3%. Bleeding occurred most frequently in the 11- to 35-year-old age group. The risk of rebleeding increased with advancing age. Among 93 patients followed after their AVM had ruptured, the risk of rebleeding was 6% in 1 year. After the first year, the average rebleeding rate was about 2% per year up to 20 years.
Guidelines are proposed for surgical management of symptomatic abnormalities of the craniocervical junction. Experience with 17 recent cases is described. Gas or metrizamide (Amipaque) myelograms with pluridirectional tomograms revealed the etiology and mechanisms of compression of the cervicomedullary junction, as well as its reducibility. Stabilization was the goal in treatment of reducible lesions. Decompression of the cervicomedullary junction was paramount in irreducible cases. Ventral compression was treated in nine patients by transoral transpalatine resection of the odontoid-clivus complex, and all nine improved. A posterior decompression was carried out when bone impingement was present from the dorsal aspect. Fusion was performed in cases in which stability was not achieved by either procedure.
Continuous cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage may be used in the treatment CSF fistula. The procedure, however, is not without risk. Marked gradients between the intracranial and intraspinal CSF pressures and intravasation of air through an unsealed fistula may produce serious neurological problems. The use of continuous CSF drainage requires an alert, informed nursing staff to avert catastrophe.
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