Congenital renal arteriovenous malformation presenting as severe hypertension
Author(s) -
Nauman Tarif,
Ahmed Mitwalli,
Saleh A. Al Samayer,
Hassan Abu-Aisha,
Nawaz Ali Memon,
Fathia Sulaimani,
Awatif Alam,
Jamal S Al Wakeel
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
nephrology dialysis transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.654
H-Index - 168
eISSN - 1460-2385
pISSN - 0931-0509
DOI - 10.1093/ndt/17.2.291
Subject(s) - medicine , arteriovenous malformation , embolization , arteriovenous fistula , vascular malformation , biopsy , surgery , radiology
Hypertensive patients presenting at the extremes ofage may have a secondary cause of hypertension.Congenital arteriovenous malformation (AVM) andacquired arteriovenous stula (AVF) are rare causes ofsecondary hypertension w1–10x. Acquired AVFs tendto be single linear connecting vessels and comprise70–80% of renal arteriovenous abnormalities andusually result from trauma, biopsy, surgery, malig-nancy, or inammation w1,3x. Congenital AVM isdescribed as crisoid with a knotted, tortuous appear-ance of numerous feeding vessels, and multipleinterconnecting stulas; however, a variant called‘angiomatous’ AVM has a single vessel feeding mul-tiple small interconnecting vessels w1,4x. We present acase of hypertension secondary to congenital AVMmanaged by superselective embolization and a briefreview of the literature.
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