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Value of prominent flow voids without cord edema in the detection of spinal arteriovenous fistulae
Authors
Arich R. Reynolds
BC Bowen
+25 more
D Gulliver
DS Rosenblum
E Saraf-Lavi
J Hartman
J Marcus
JA Anson
Jeroen Hendrikse
K Jellema
K Jellema
K Sato
L Symon
LD Brown
Lea M. Alhilali
M Mascalchi
M Mull
N Aghakhani
R Muralidharan
R Muralidharan
RW Hurst
S Toossi
Saeed Fakhran
SW Hetts
T Krings
TJ Masaryk
WJ van Rooij
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
Cite
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Purpose: To determine the prevalence of spinal dural arteriovenous fistulae (SDAVF) in patients presenting with prominent vascular flow voids on imaging without other imaging findings suggestive of SDAVF. Methods: We retrospectively identified patients from January 1, 2005 to March 1, 2012 who underwent spinal angiography for suspected SDAVF with prominent vascular flow voids on prior imaging. We excluded patients with other major spinal pathology or other imaging findings of SDAVF including cord hyperintensity, enhancement, or expansion. We calculated the proportion of patients with positive findings for SDAVF on angiography and evaluated the prevalence of SDAVF for this finding alone and in correlation with clinical findings. Results: 18 patients underwent spinal angiography for prominent flow voids on imaging without other spinal pathology or imaging findings of SDAVF. Three had a SDAVF detected on angiography. The prevalence of SDAVF in this population was low, only 17% (95% CI 6-39%). All of the patients with positive angiography findings had myelopathy, increasing the prevalence to 100% if the additional clinical finding of myelopathy was present. Conclusions: Prominent flow voids without other imaging findings suggestive of SDAVF is poorly predictive of the presence of a SDAVF, unless myelopathy is present clinically. © 2014 Alhilali et al
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