Chinese Neurosurgical Journal (May 2018)

Contrast enhancement of vascular walls of intracranial high flow malformations in black blood MRI indicates high inflammatory activity

  • Athanasios K. Petridis,
  • Maxine Dibue-Adjei,
  • Jan F. Cornelius,
  • Marian Preetham Suresh,
  • Lan Li,
  • Marcel A. Kamp,
  • Yousef Abusabha,
  • Bernd Turowski,
  • Hans Jakob Steiger,
  • Rebecca May

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41016-018-0120-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background There are controversies concerning the natural history of arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in literature and it is not clear which AVMs should be treated and which should be just observed. Objective criteria beyond growth in serial MRIs or angiographies are needed. The use of black blood MRI is currently under investigation for evaluating the rupture risk of cerebral aneurysms, however its use for assessment of AVMs has yet to be evaluated. We therefore conducted a feasibility study on the application of black blood MRI (bbMRI) in AVMs to assess rupture risk. Methods Retrospective study of 10 patients with intracranial AVMs and 4 patients with arteriovenous fistulas who received a black blood MRI before treatment. Results AVM niduses (9/10) show contrast enhancement irrespective of rupture or size. All arteriovenous fistulas (4 / 4) were contrast enhancing irrespective of rupture. Conclusion High flow malformations are in a permanent stage of inflammation which does not seem to allow conclusions on their rupture risk at the current stage. BbMRI is a feasible method of identifying inflammation in AVMs and arteriovenous fistulas. However, future prospective studies are needed to evaluate whether bbMRI contrast enhancement correlates with rupture risk.

Keywords