J Neuroradiology
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Review Case Reports
[Intracranial dural fistula with spinal cord venous drainage. Apropos of 2 cases].
The authors report 2 new cases of intracranial dural fistula draining into spinal veins. Comparisons with 19 other published cases showed that dural fistulae of the spine share common features with intracranial fistulae. The first case concerned a 78-year old woman presenting with a thoraco-lumbar myelopathy which proceeded by increasingly severe bouts and ended within 6 months in a flaccid sensorimotor paraplegia with urinary incontinence. ⋯ These two cases, compared with those of the literature, shared a number of features with spinal dural arteriovenous fistulae: they occur in middle-aged and predominantly male patients, and the clinical signs of ascending myelopathy are caused by the same physiopathological mechanism of spinal vein hyperpressure. Lesions of the medulla oblongata or the cervical spinal cord are found only in intracranial arteriovenous fistulae draining into spinal veins. Diagnosis is based on data provided by myelography (impressions of dilated and sinous vessels) and MRI (low-intensity perispinal signals, widening of the conus medullaris with high-intensity centrospinal signal); spinal cord angiography only shows a lack of venous return of Adamkiewicz artery without any other abnormality, whereas cerebral arteriography confirmed the diagnosis of intracranial dural arteriovenous fistula draining into spinal veins.