Course of headaches associated with cAVMs after radiosurgery |
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Authors: | Ghossoub M Nataf F Merienne L Devaux B Turak B Djian M C Page P Roux F X |
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Affiliation: | Service de Neurochirurgie, Centre Hospitalier Sainte-Anne, 1, rue Cabanis, 75014 Paris. |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this study is to evaluate the response of headaches associated with cerebral arteriovenous malformations following radiosurgery and determine the factors that are associated with a positive outcome. From our series of 700 patients whose cAVM was treated by radiosurgery, this study includes 109 patients (48 males, 61 females) with a mean age of 32 when radiosurgery was performed. Headaches resolved in 37 patients (53.7%), decreased in 14 patients (20.3%), persisted in 16 patients (23.2%), and even increased in frequency in 2 (2.9%). Headaches disappeared 2 years following radiosurgery in the majority of patients (31 out of 37: 83.3%). The disappearance rate of headaches was better when it was the only sign of the malformation (64%) or preceded an epileptic seizure (60%) with respect to the case when it preceded cerebral hemorrhage (34.8%). Headaches having the best response were those with 1 to 2 episodes per month (64.9%) and whose episode duration was less than 3 hours (67.6%). Unilateral headaches accounted for 86.5% of resolved headaches whereas bilateral headaches were only 8.1% and even less were the diffuse ones (5.4%). The best evolution was obtained for those associated with a parietal location of the cerebral arteriovenous malformation, followed by rolandic (respectively 55.5% and 50%). Occipital malformation was associated with headache disappearance in 38.1% and temporal with 34.3%, whereas frontal location was associated with headache disappearance in only 25% of the cases. Headache disappearance was often correlated with cerebral arteriovenous malformation outcome after radiosurgery (64.9% of disappearance in case of complete obliteration). However, in 24.8%, headaches disappeared prior to the malformation obliteration and were associated with a decrease of the flow, of the nidus volume or with the nidus disappearance with the persistence of a precocious venous drainage. Headaches disappeared in spite of the malformation persistence in 5.4% of the cases. We found de novo headaches in one patient one year following RS. Another patient presented an episode of headache 12 hours following RS. The course of headaches associated with cerebral arteriovenous malformations after radiosurgery is positive in the majority of cases and correlated to the malformation outcome. This correlation suggests a link between cerebral arteriovenous malformations and headaches and the equal benefit of radiosurgery on both of them. |
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