Rp. Humphreys et al., CHOICES IN THE 1990S FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF PEDIATRIC CEREBRAL ARTERIOVENOUS-MALFORMATIONS, Pediatric neurosurgery, 25(6), 1996, pp. 277-285
A retrospective 45-year analysis of the management of 160 children wit
h intracranial arteriovenous malformations at The Hospital for Sick Ch
ildren, Toronto, reveals substantially improving outcomes which relate
to more efficient diagnoses and treatments. 80% of children will decl
are their malformation by means of spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage
. For those children who present with hemorrhage or epilepsy, 80% will
require an operation, The overall mortality rate has declined to 12%
since 1975 and that for the cerebellar lesions from 67 to 42%, 53% of
the patients operated upon will be neurologically normal, Endovascular
embolization of a child's AVM is a customized, partial solution for a
limited number of children, Stereotactic radiosurgery will be used in
creasingly to obliterate those small lesions in children which are una
ssociated with hemorrhage or are the residua of an operation, As many
as 10% of children (15/160) with diagnosed AVMs cannot be helped with
operative or other interventional therapies. The recognition of the pe
diatric stroke syndromes, the early triage and diagnosis of a child's
cerebral hemorrhage, the operative and anaesthetic technologies and th
e adjunct therapies - choices of the nineties - have resulted in a 66%
decline in the overall mortality from this vascular lesion as well as
greater assuredness that for most the lesion can be permanently oblit
erated.