» Articles » PMID: 9565965

Delayed Cyst Formation After Radiosurgery for Cerebral Arteriovenous Malformation: Two Case Reports

Overview
Publisher Thieme
Date 1998 May 5
PMID 9565965
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Two patients who underwent gamma knife radiosurgery for ruptured cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVM) developed cystic lesions at 78 and 111 months after undergoing treatment. Both patients presented initially with intracerebral hemorrhage. In one patient, the cystic lesion was discovered during routine follow-up imaging and clinical examination revealed homonymous hemianopsia; the second patient presented with seizure and the lesion was identified more than 9 years after radiosurgery. One patient underwent resection of the nidus and histologic analysis of the resected specimen showed vessels in various stages of obliteration. The present paper discusses the possible mechanism for the delayed development of cystic lesions, and the possibility that radiation-induced vascular changes may continue in a nidus even when angiography shows complete obliteration of the nidus.

Citing Articles

Volume-Staged Radiosurgery for Large Arteriovenous Malformation.

Xuan N, Tuong P, Khoa T, Hiep P, Thanh N, Bao D Case Rep Neurol. 2020; 12(3):282-290.

PMID: 33082766 PMC: 7548954. DOI: 10.1159/000508943.


Radiosurgical management of pediatric arteriovenous malformations.

Kondziolka D, Kano H, Yang H, Flickinger J, Lunsford L Childs Nerv Syst. 2010; 26(10):1359-66.

PMID: 20607249 DOI: 10.1007/s00381-010-1207-x.


Tumefactive cysts: a delayed complication following radiosurgery for cerebral arterial venous malformations.

Edmister W, Lane J, Gilbertson J, Brown R, Pollock B AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2005; 26(5):1152-7.

PMID: 15891175 PMC: 8158641.