• Pain physician · Jan 2017

    Multidisciplinary Care of Unruptured Brain Arteriovenous Malformations to Improve Symptomatic Headache and the Onset, Progression, and Outcomes of Unruptured Brain Arteriovenous Malformations.

    • Ling-Feng Lai, Min Chen, Jia-Xiang Chen, Kuang Zheng, Xu-Ying He, Xi-Feng Li, Xin Zhang, Jian Yin, Qiu-Jing Wang, Tuan-Ming Zou, and Chuan-Zhi Duan.
    • The National Key Clinical Specialty. The Engineering Technology Research Center of Education. Ministry of China, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory on Brain Function Repair and Regeneration Department of Neurosurgery, Zhujiang Hospital, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China.
    • Pain Physician. 2017 Jan 1; 20 (1): E127-E136.

    BackgroundSymptomatic headaches attributed to unruptured brain arteriovenous malformations (ubAVMs) are very common and affect patients' quality life, but multidisciplinary care of ubAVMs to improve symptomatic headache remains unclear.ObjectiveThe objective is to identify the features of symptomatic headaches, and to obtain headache outcomes following multidisciplinary care of ubAVMs, as well as provide background on the natural history of ubAVMs.Study DesignThe features of symptomatic headaches and headache outcomes were analyzed in a large cohort of cases after multidisciplinary care of ubAVMs. We have also provided information on the natural history of ubAVMs.SettingThis study was conducted at the Department of Neurosurgery of Zhujiang Hospital where 336 patients from 1998 to 2014 were reviewed by a multidiscipline team. Only 124 patients were eligible.MethodsThe demographics, clinical features, imaging features, and headache details of eligible patients were reviewed. An 11-point pain scale score was used to assess symptomatic headaches before, during, and after treatment. The headache outcomes, death or stroke, and adverse functional outcomes (modified Rankin Scale score = 2, mRS = 2) were assessed following multidisciplinary care of ubAVMs.ResultsTwenty-three (56.1%) of 41 patients had migraine-like headaches located in occipital lobe (P < 0.001), while forty (63.5%) of 63 patients had tension-type-like headaches located in frontotemporal lobe (P < 0.001). For patients with tension-type-like or all types of headache, headache improvement differed between the multidisciplinary group and medical group (87.8% vs. 31.8%, P < 0.001; 85.7% vs. 40.7%, P < 0.001). The risk of death or stroke did not differ between multidisciplinary group and medical group (P = 0.393), whereas the risk of adverse functional outcome (mRS = 2) differed significantly by long-time follow-up (23.0% vs.10.0%, P = 0.022).LimitationsThis study provides the initial experience to support multidisciplinary care for ubAVMs to improve symptomatic headaches and patients' quality life, but based on the retrospective study with inherent limitations, larger samples and multi-center trials are needed on this interesting issue.ConclusionsOccipital ubAVM is more likely to present with migraine-like headache, while frontotemporal ubAVM tends to present with tension-type-like headache. The effectiveness of multidisciplinary care for ubAVM to improve headache has been shown, but the natural history of ubAVM patients with headache remains unclear.Key Words: Unruptured brain arteriovenous malformations, headache, headache improvement, natural history.

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