1. Traumatic middle meningeal arteriovenous fistulas (MMAVFs): an exploratory systematic review.
- Author
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Terry, Fernando, Luther, Evan, Rodriguez-Calienes, Aaron, Lopez-Calle, Jaime, Diaz-Llanes, Bruno, Quispe-Vicuna, Carlos, Saal-Zapata, Giancarlo, Levy, Adam S., Padilla-Santos, Mariella, Zullo, Kyle, Cabanillas-Lazo, Miguel, Alva-Diaz, Carlos, Starke, Robert M., and Sequeiros, Joel
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MEDICAL drainage , *SURGICAL complications , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *CRANIOCEREBRAL injuries , *IATROGENIC diseases , *ARTERIOVENOUS fistula - Abstract
This study aims to systematically review case reports and case series in order to compare the postoperative course of conservative, endovascular and surgical treatments for traumatic dural arteriovenous fistulas predominantly supplied by the middle meningeal artery (MMAVFs), which usually occur following head trauma or iatrogenic causes. We conducted a comprehensive search of PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar until June 23rd, 2024. Three cohorts were defined based on the treatment modality employed. The primary outcomes were the rates of overall obliteration and postoperative complications, with all-cause mortlality considered as secondary outcome. A total of 61 studies encompassing 78 pooled MMAVFs were included in the qualitative analysis. The predominant demographic consisted of males (53.9%) with a median age of 50.5 (IQR: 33.5–67.5) years. The main etiologies for fistula formation were head trauma (75.6%), cranial neurosurgical procedures (11.5%) and endovascular embolization (8.97%). Venous drainage patterns were categorized as follows based on anatomical confluence: Class I (16.7%), II (14.1%), III (12.8%), IV (14.1%), V (7.7%), and VI (3.9%). Regarding treatment efficacy, the overall obliteration rate was 89.74%, achieved through endovascular (95.83%), surgical (64.29%) or conservative (93.75%) approaches. In terms of safety, the overall postoperative complication rate was 6.49% with an all-cause mortality rate of 8.97%, predominantly observed in the surgical group (35.71%). Our systematic review highlights the challenging management of traumatic MMAVFs, frequently associated with head injuries. Endovascular therapy has emerged as the predominant treatment modality, demonstrating markedly higher rates of fistula obliteration, reduced all-cause mortality, and fewer postoperative complications. Key messages: What is already known on this topic: The middle meningeal artery (MMA) often contributes to the arterial supply of dural arteriovenous fistulas (dAVFs). However, MMA-dominant fistulas are uncommon and typically occur following head trauma or iatrogenic injury. What this study adds: This study compiles the largest dataset to date on the demographics, clinical characteristics, therapeutic options, and postoperative outcomes of MMAVFs. How this study might affect research, practice or policy: By identifying potential therapeutic strategies to enhance postoperative outcomes in MMAVFs, this study contributes valuable insights for developing clinical practice guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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