Der Radiologe
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Case Reports
[Venous anomalies of the brain. The clinical significance of the so-called venous angioma].
In contrast to angiography, MRI not only allows the diagnosis of DVA (developmental venous anomaly, so-called venous angioma), but also shows up cavernomas and other angiographically occult vascular malformations. It also differentiates between DVAs and occult true malformations. This has completely changed the pathological assessment of DVAs. ⋯ In rare cases this can result in haemodynamic disturbances, thrombosis and ischaemia. Wall rupture with bleeding does not occur in DVA. It must be assumed that bleeding reported in patients with DVAs before the availability of MRI resulted from an associated true vascular malformation in most cases.