FACTS
- low-flow vascular lesions composed of dilated capillary channels without intervening brain tissue.
- Hemorrhage risk is generally low (~0.5–1%/yr), but increases after a symptomatic bleed, particularly in brainstem lesions.
- Present with seizures, focal deficits, headache, or acute neurologic change from hemorrhage.
- Surgery is considered for accessible lesions causing symptoms, recurrent hemorrhage, or medically refractory epilepsy.
- associated with DVA (developmental venous anomaly)
- Associations: radiation, familial (AD) associated with multiple lesions, capillary telangiectasias
A/P
- operate only if symptomatic / growing
- Counsel:
- usually incidental/asymptomatic, but do have a lifetime risk of seizures, hemorrhage
- supratentorial & asymptomatic: 4% 5 year hemorrhage / deficit risk
- infratentorial & asymptomatic: 8% 5 year hemorrhage / deficit risk
- brainstem / hemorrhaghic lesion: 31% 5 year recurrent hemorrhage risk
- first bleed rarely fatal, but rebleeds can cause disability cumulatively
Operative cavernoma
most cavernomas are incidental and may seem trivial, but they can also be devastating. This is a CTA negative bleed that was diagnosed as a cavernoma only from a surgical specimen obtained following emergent L crani.
Familial cavernous malformations
followed AD pattern
mutations in CCM1, CCM2, CCCM3