Scientific News Health care Surgery GLUE AND COILS HELP PREVENT MALFORMATIONS AND ANEURYSMS
A unique treatment at The Ohio
State University Medical Center is using surgical glue and coils to correct
abnormally connecting blood vessels that are linked to seizures, headaches and
sometimes death.
Tangled blood vessels called arteriovenous malformations, or AVMs, are complex
lesions in the brain, which cause blood to bypass the brain, said Dr. Gregory
Christoforidis, an interventional neuroradiologist at OSU Medical Center.
Because there is considerable force on the vessel walls, the AVM can develop or
bulge into an aneurysm and then hemorrhage, possibly leading to severe brain
damage or even death. With the use of a newly developed surgical glue, doctors
can locate and remove AVMs before they erupt, he said.
"The use of glue at the AVM site prior to corrective surgery is more
effective than traditional surgery alone," said Christoforidis, who is one
of the few doctors in the country trained to perform the procedure. The
injection of glue inside the blood vessels is effective in shutting off blood
circulation to the AVM; while coils are used to stop blood flow to the aneurysm.
"If there is no blood flowing into the AVM or the aneurysm, neither can
bleed during surgery," he said. "The neurosurgeon can remove the AVM
with significantly less risk of causing a brain hemorrhage."
Removing the AVM results in improved blood flow to the brain said Christoforidis.
During the procedure, a catheter is maneuvered through an artery in the leg,
then up through the torso and neck into the brain where the AVM and aneurysm are
located. The physician, who is monitoring the placement, guides the catheter
into place by x-ray. When the catheter is in position, the glue and coils are
deployed. Once the blood flow has stopped, some patients then have the AVM site
removed in surgery so there will be no recurrence of an AVM at that location.
The aneurysm does not need to be removed said Christoforidis.
"We have had considerable success with both the glue and coil techniques
followed by surgical removal of the AVM on the same day," said Dr. John
McGregor, a neurosurgeon at OSU Medical Center. "Because the blood flow is
stopped before surgery, there is less bleeding and a shorter time in the
operating room for the patient -- benefits that reduce possible risks of the
surgery."
Christoforidis said doctors do not know exactly how or why people are born with
or acquire AVMs and aneurysms, and usually there is no hereditary link. AVMs
occur less often than strokes but both have similar symptoms. AVMs can cause
numbness or paralysis in one side of the body; difficulty speaking and
understanding speech; loss of balance and coordination; seizures; blurred vision;
and severe and sudden headache.
The Ohio State University Medical Center has
consistently been named one of America's best hospitals by US News & World
Report. The Medical Center is widely recognized for programs in heart care,
cancer, orthopedics, organ transplantation, rehabilitation, women's services and
neuroscience. University Medical Center is the only academic medical center
serving central and southern Ohio and cares for 3,000 patients daily.
Contact: Jill Boatman, Medical Center
Communications; 614-293-3737; http://www.osumedcenter.edu/contact.asp
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Ohio
State University Medical Center
Publishing date: October 25, 2001
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