• World Neurosurg · May 2012

    Case Reports

    Pial arteriovenous fistula resulting from ventriculostomy.

    • Albert J Schuette, Spiros L Blackburn, Daniel L Barrow, and Charles M Cawley.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. ajschue@gmail.com
    • World Neurosurg. 2012 May 1;77(5-6):785.e1-2.

    ObjectiveVentriculostomy complications are well documented in the literature. We report the first known example of an arteriovenous fistula created during passage of a ventriculostomy catheter for the treatment of hydrocephalus.MethodsA 47-year-old female patient initially presented with a subarachnoid hemorrhage and an anterior communicating artery aneurysm. The patient underwent coil embolization followed by a ventriculostomy catheter for hydrocephalus. After recovery, a follow-up angiogram demonstrated a new arteriovenous fistula at the site of the ventriculostomy. A craniotomy was performed at the site of the ventriculostomy burr-hole site. Indocyanine green videoangiography confirmed the site of the fistula.ResultsThe fistulous point was coagulated and divided and confirmed with both indocyanine green videoangiography and intraoperative diagnostic angiography. The patient recovered without deficit.ConclusionThis is the first reported case of a pial arteriovenous fistula from a ventriculostomy catheter. The formation of a fistula can occur from trauma to cortical arteries and veins at the pial entry site. Although rare, vascular injury and subsequent fistula formation may form in patients in whom catheter tract hemorrhages occur after catheter placement.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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