There are several treatments for brain arteriovenous malformation (AVM). The main goal of treatment is to prevent bleeding, known as a hemorrhage. Treatment also can help control seizures or other brain symptoms.
The proper treatment depends on your age, health, and the size and location of the brain AVM.
Medicines may be used to treat symptoms caused by the AVM, such as headaches or seizures.
Surgery is the most common treatment for brain AVMs. There are three surgical options:
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Surgical removal, known as resection. Surgery may be recommended if the brain AVM has bled or is in an area that can easily be reached. In this procedure, the surgeon removes part of the skull to gain access to the AVM.
With the help of a high-powered microscope, the surgeon seals off the AVM with special clips and carefully removes it from surrounding brain tissue. The surgeon then reattaches the skull bone and closes the incision in the scalp.
Resection usually is done when the AVM can be removed with little risk of hemorrhage or seizure. AVMs that are in deep brain regions carry a higher risk of complications, and other treatments may be recommended.
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Endovascular embolization. In this procedure, a catheter is inserted into an artery in the leg or wrist. The catheter is threaded through blood vessels to the brain using X-ray imaging.
The catheter is positioned in one of the arteries that feeds the brain AVM. The surgeon injects an embolizing agent. This may be small particles, a gluelike substance, microcoils or other materials. The embolizing agent blocks the artery and reduces blood flow into the AVM.
Endovascular embolization is less invasive than traditional surgery. It may be performed alone but it's often used before other surgical treatments to make them safer. It does this by reducing the size of the brain AVM or the likelihood of bleeding.
In some large brain AVMs, endovascular embolization may be used to reduce stroke-like symptoms by redirecting blood back to brain tissue.
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Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). This treatment uses precisely focused radiation to destroy the AVM. This type of surgery doesn't require cuts in the body the way other surgeries do.
Instead, SRS directs many highly targeted radiation beams at the AVM to damage the blood vessels and cause scarring. The scarred AVM blood vessels then slowly close in 1 to 3 years.
This treatment may be done for small AVMs that are hard to remove with traditional surgery. It also may be done for AVMs that haven't caused dangerous hemorrhages.
Sometimes healthcare professionals decide to monitor a brain AVM rather than treating it. This may be recommended if you have few or no symptoms or if your AVM is in an area of your brain that's hard to treat. Monitoring includes regular medical checkups with your healthcare team.
Potential future treatments
Researchers are studying ways to better predict the risk of hemorrhage in people with brain AVM. This can help better guide treatment decisions. For example, high blood pressure within the AVM and hereditary syndromes that affect the brain may affect the risk of hemorrhage.
Innovations in imaging technology also are being evaluated. Innovations include 3D imaging, brain tract mapping, and functional imaging, which produces images of blood flow to certain areas of the brain. The techniques have the potential to improve surgical precision and safety in removing brain AVMs and preserving surrounding blood vessels.
Ongoing advances in embolization, radiosurgery and microsurgery techniques also are making it possible to use surgery to treat brain AVMs that were hard to access in the past. Advances also are making it safer to remove brain AVMs during surgery.