In a series of 145 patients with brain cavernous angiomas treated at our hospital in the last 16 years, the angiomas of 18 patients exhibited aggressive biological behavior characterized by recurrent overt bleeding, growth, or de novo appearance. The cavernomas were in the cerebellum in three patients, in the brain stem in one, in the thalamus in four, in the caudate nucleus in two, in the diencephalon in one, and in the white matter of the cerebral hemispheres in seven. Three of these patients suffered from the familial or multiple form of the disease, two were pregnant, three had previously been irradiated for other tumors, and one had been treated by radiosurgery in the past. Overall, new cavernous malformations not previously shown were discovered in six patients. In 10 patients (3 male and 7 female) presenting with recurrent hemorrhages, the mean period of time between bleedings was 11 months (range, 1 wk-3 yr). Eleven patients were treated by definitive surgery, and seven were conservatively treated. One patient with a diencephalic cavernoma died from progressive hypothalamic dysfunction; three patients in the nonsurgical group had repeated symptoms and were left with additional neurological deficits. The outcome of the surgical group was the same (seven patients) or improved (four patients). Risk factors favoring an aggressive behavior included pregnancy, familial or multiple form of the disease, previous whole brain or stereotactic radiotherapy, incomplete removal, brain location, and associated venous malformation. The female preponderance (female to male ratio, 13:5) may also suggest some role of hormonal factors in influencing the biological behavior of cavernous malformations.
The frequency and severity of cardiac arrhythmias were studied in 70 patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage investigated prospectively with 24-hour Hotter monitoring. Patients were < 70 years old and without clinical and/or ECG signs of previous heart disease; Hoi ter monitoring was initiated within 48 hours of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Arrhythmias were detected in 64 of the 70 patients (91%). Twenty-nine of the 70 patients (41%) showed serious cardiac arrhythmias; malignant ventricular arrhythmias, i.e., torsade de pointe and ventricular flutter or fibrillation, occurred in 3 cases. Serious ventricular arrhythmias were associated with QTc prolongation and hypokalemia. No correlation was found between the frequency and severity of cardiac arrhythmias and the neurologic condition, the site and extent of intracranial blood on computed tomography scan, or the location of ruptured malformation. The extremely high incidence of cardiac arrhythmias, sometimes serious, in the acute period after subarachnoid hemorrhage and the absence of clinical and radiologic predictors make systematic continuous ECG monitoring compulsory to improve the overall results of subarachnoid hemorrhage, irrespective of early or delayed surgical treatment. (Stroke 1987; 18:558-564)
The infratentorial compartment represents the second most common location of arachnoid malformations. Ten arachnoid cysts of the posterior fossa, operated on between 1970 and 1983, are reviewed. These lesions, although congenital and developmental in nature, may present at any age, and males are more frequently affected. A high rate of birth-related trauma (50% in this series) is conceivably due to fetal macrocranium, and the enlarged head and psychomotor retardation prevail in infancy and childhood. In arachnoid cysts occurring during adulthood, symptoms and signs more clearly indicate a dysfunction of the posterior fossa. Besides computerized tomography, pneumoencephalography and metrizamide techniques are recommended to rule out a Dandy-Walker syndrome in doubtful cases, and to obtain information about the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulation. It is particularly important to establish the presence and type of communication of cysts with the CSF pathways. Although infratentorial cysts often communicate, they can be space-occupying masses because of increasing CSF retention, which may be due to a ball-valve mechanism or to inadequate communication. The frequently associated hydrocephalus (seven of the 10 cases in this series had hydrocephalus) seemed to be dependent mainly upon mechanical factors. The authors discuss the indications for intracranial surgery versus shunting procedures and report the results achieved by direct cyst excision.
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