| Literature DB >> 21092206 |
Jessica Kandel1, Philip Meyers2,3, Yukiko Oe4, Lauren Orr5, Sherelle Laifer-Narin2, Eiichi Hyodo4, Agnes Koczo4, Shunichi Homma4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vascular malformations with arteriovenous shunt components can cause significant disability, chronic pain, and functional impairment. Effective treatment may require serial procedures, yet an imaging modality optimized to control cost and reduce radiation exposure in this predominantly pediatric population has not yet been identified. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21092206 PMCID: PMC3002313 DOI: 10.1186/2040-2384-2-25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Angiogenes Res ISSN: 2040-2384
Figure 1MR and angiographic studies suggestive of multiple arteriovenous shunts supplying a venous malformation. A 26-year-old female with a painful vascular malformation of the right lower leg with a clinically obvious venous component was evaluated for arteriovenous shunting. (A) Parasagittal T2-weighted MR image with intravenous gadolinium contrast demonstrated an infiltrative vascular malformation in the right gastrocnemius (arrows). (B) Digital subtraction angiogram of the right leg in a lateral projection during the arterial phase revealed arteriovenous shunting (arrow) within the vascular malformation, supplied by sural branches of the right popliteal artery.
Figure 2Contrast-enhanced and color Doppler ultrasound studies. Two-dimensional ultrasound images were obtained at the level of 3-5 cm below the popliteal fossa (PF). The color Doppler studies demonstrated no abnormal vasculature in the same location on the unaffected leg (A), but multiple tortuous vessel structures with pulsatile flow compatible with venous malformation fed by arteriovenous shunts (B). Pulse Doppler studies identified three specific foci of arteriovenous shunts characterized by low-resistance flow, composed of a normal venous waveform with superimposed arterial pulsatile flow (C). The same studies in the unaffected leg demonstrated a normal arterial wave form (D).