Therapeutic clues in spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas - a 30 year experience of 156 cases.

Standard

Therapeutic clues in spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas - a 30 year experience of 156 cases. / Hessler, Christian; Regelsberger, Jan; Grzyska, U; Illies, T; Zeumer, Hermann; Westphal, Manfred.

in: ZBL NEUROCHIR, 2009.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Hessler, C, Regelsberger, J, Grzyska, U, Illies, T, Zeumer, H & Westphal, M 2009, 'Therapeutic clues in spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas - a 30 year experience of 156 cases.', ZBL NEUROCHIR. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19784910?dopt=Citation>

APA

Hessler, C., Regelsberger, J., Grzyska, U., Illies, T., Zeumer, H., & Westphal, M. (2009). Therapeutic clues in spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas - a 30 year experience of 156 cases. ZBL NEUROCHIR. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19784910?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Hessler C, Regelsberger J, Grzyska U, Illies T, Zeumer H, Westphal M. Therapeutic clues in spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas - a 30 year experience of 156 cases. ZBL NEUROCHIR. 2009.

Bibtex

@article{d20a201236ea4253b7d9b29ecb1efca9,
title = "Therapeutic clues in spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas - a 30 year experience of 156 cases.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Spinal dural arteriovenous fistulae (SDAVF) are rare but remain the most common type of spinal vascular malformations. Treatment options for SDAVF include endovascular embolization, microsurgical dissection or a combination of both. But the optimal treatment paradigm has yet to be defined and may well be an individualized interdisciplinary combinatorial approach. MATERIAL AND METHODS: From 1980 to 2008, 156 patients with the diagnosis of SDAVF were treated by neuroradiological and neurosurgical means. Based on the procedure-related complications we retrospectively analyzed our data to elucidate the reasons for endovascular failure and the evolution of the surgical technique. RESULTS: 156 patients were included in this study. There were 31 (19.9%) female and 125 (80.1%) male patients. Average age at the time of diagnosis was 60.8 years. 102 out of 156 (65.4%) underwent endovascular obliteration, 54 (34.6%) patients were treated primarily by surgery. 134 (85.9%) underwent follow-up examination. A total of 29 (18.6%) out of 156 patients could not be treated successfully by endovascular (9.4%) or surgical (4.1%) means. CONCLUSION: Microsurgery can be recommended as the first choice treatment when the fistula's point is unmistakably identified intradurally. Endovascular obliteration may be justifiable in cases with an easy access to a monoradicular feeding artery during diagnostic angiography. Surgery is a definitive treatment with stable long-term results in which procedure-related morbidity is low. During evolution of the combined approach, endovascular coil placement for correct localization of the fistula and the use of intraoperative micro-Doppler was found to be very helpful in increasing the safety of the surgical procedure and minimizing surgical exposure.",
author = "Christian Hessler and Jan Regelsberger and U Grzyska and T Illies and Hermann Zeumer and Manfred Westphal",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Therapeutic clues in spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas - a 30 year experience of 156 cases.

AU - Hessler, Christian

AU - Regelsberger, Jan

AU - Grzyska, U

AU - Illies, T

AU - Zeumer, Hermann

AU - Westphal, Manfred

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - BACKGROUND: Spinal dural arteriovenous fistulae (SDAVF) are rare but remain the most common type of spinal vascular malformations. Treatment options for SDAVF include endovascular embolization, microsurgical dissection or a combination of both. But the optimal treatment paradigm has yet to be defined and may well be an individualized interdisciplinary combinatorial approach. MATERIAL AND METHODS: From 1980 to 2008, 156 patients with the diagnosis of SDAVF were treated by neuroradiological and neurosurgical means. Based on the procedure-related complications we retrospectively analyzed our data to elucidate the reasons for endovascular failure and the evolution of the surgical technique. RESULTS: 156 patients were included in this study. There were 31 (19.9%) female and 125 (80.1%) male patients. Average age at the time of diagnosis was 60.8 years. 102 out of 156 (65.4%) underwent endovascular obliteration, 54 (34.6%) patients were treated primarily by surgery. 134 (85.9%) underwent follow-up examination. A total of 29 (18.6%) out of 156 patients could not be treated successfully by endovascular (9.4%) or surgical (4.1%) means. CONCLUSION: Microsurgery can be recommended as the first choice treatment when the fistula's point is unmistakably identified intradurally. Endovascular obliteration may be justifiable in cases with an easy access to a monoradicular feeding artery during diagnostic angiography. Surgery is a definitive treatment with stable long-term results in which procedure-related morbidity is low. During evolution of the combined approach, endovascular coil placement for correct localization of the fistula and the use of intraoperative micro-Doppler was found to be very helpful in increasing the safety of the surgical procedure and minimizing surgical exposure.

AB - BACKGROUND: Spinal dural arteriovenous fistulae (SDAVF) are rare but remain the most common type of spinal vascular malformations. Treatment options for SDAVF include endovascular embolization, microsurgical dissection or a combination of both. But the optimal treatment paradigm has yet to be defined and may well be an individualized interdisciplinary combinatorial approach. MATERIAL AND METHODS: From 1980 to 2008, 156 patients with the diagnosis of SDAVF were treated by neuroradiological and neurosurgical means. Based on the procedure-related complications we retrospectively analyzed our data to elucidate the reasons for endovascular failure and the evolution of the surgical technique. RESULTS: 156 patients were included in this study. There were 31 (19.9%) female and 125 (80.1%) male patients. Average age at the time of diagnosis was 60.8 years. 102 out of 156 (65.4%) underwent endovascular obliteration, 54 (34.6%) patients were treated primarily by surgery. 134 (85.9%) underwent follow-up examination. A total of 29 (18.6%) out of 156 patients could not be treated successfully by endovascular (9.4%) or surgical (4.1%) means. CONCLUSION: Microsurgery can be recommended as the first choice treatment when the fistula's point is unmistakably identified intradurally. Endovascular obliteration may be justifiable in cases with an easy access to a monoradicular feeding artery during diagnostic angiography. Surgery is a definitive treatment with stable long-term results in which procedure-related morbidity is low. During evolution of the combined approach, endovascular coil placement for correct localization of the fistula and the use of intraoperative micro-Doppler was found to be very helpful in increasing the safety of the surgical procedure and minimizing surgical exposure.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

ER -