Spinal fistulas documented by contrast enhanced computed tomography during myelopathy workup: a lost opportunity
Autor: | Lydia Gregg, Philippe Gailloud, Olwen C. Murphy, Carlos A. Pardo, Abderrahmane Hedjoudje |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Neurology Computed tomography Spinal Cord Diseases Transverse myelitis Veins 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging 03 medical and health sciences Myelopathy 0302 clinical medicine Older patients medicine Humans Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Spinal canal Aged Neuroradiology medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry medicine.disease Magnetic Resonance Imaging medicine.anatomical_structure Spinal Cord Arteriovenous Fistula Neurology (clinical) Neurosurgery Radiology Tomography X-Ray Computed Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Neuroradiology. 63:201-207 |
ISSN: | 1432-1920 0028-3940 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00234-020-02601-x |
Popis: | Low-flow spinal arteriovenous fistulas (SAVFs) with intradural venous drainage typically manifest with a progressive venous hypertensive myelopathy (VHM) in older patients. VHM is difficult to identify. MRI is often nonspecific, and many cases are initially misdiagnosed, most often as transverse myelitis. The workup of myelopathic patients frequently includes thoracic and/or abdominal contrast-enhanced CT (CECT) that are generally not reviewed by neuroradiologists. The purpose of this work was to investigate how often abnormal enhancing intracanalar structures corresponding to the draining veins of a low-flow SAVF were documented by CECT. We evaluated 92 consecutive patients with low-flow SAVFs and VHM treated at our institution between 2009 and 2018. The study group included 22 of these patients with at least one thoracoabdominal CECT available for review. The control group consisted of 20 consecutive myelopathy patients with negative angiography and at least one thoracoabdominal CECT. Intracanalar enhancing structures were classified either as (i) conspicuous or (ii) equivocal or absent. One CECT in the study group was technically inadequate. Conspicuous intracanalar enhancing structures were observed in 20 of the remaining 21 patients with SAVFs (95.2%) and in 2 of 20 control patients (10%). None of the enhancing intracanalar structures was mentioned in official study reports. The presence of enhancing vascular structures within the spinal canal on thoracoabdominal CECT obtained during the workup of myelopathies appears to represent a powerful but currently underappreciated tool for the detection of low-flow SAVFs. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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