Giant Cavernous Malformations in Young Adults: Report of two cases, Radiological Findings and Surgical Consequences
Author(s) -
Dr M.R. Parizel,
Thomas Menovsky,
Veerle Van Marck,
Martin Lammens,
Paul M. Parizel
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the belgian society of radiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.232
H-Index - 24
ISSN - 2514-8281
DOI - 10.5334/jbr-btr.1327
Subject(s) - medicine , cavernous malformations , headaches , radiological weapon , angioma , hemangioma , mass effect , radiology , arteriovenous malformation , vascular malformation , gcm transcription factors , surgery , vascular disease , magnetic resonance imaging , computed tomography , general circulation model , ecology , climate change , biology
Cerebral cavernous malformations, also known as cavernous angioma or cavernoma, are a type of vascular disorder. They consist of abnormally large vascular cavities or sinusoid channels of varying size. The majority of cavernous malformations in the brain are small and do not always present with symptoms. A minority of large cavernous malformations, known as giant cavernous malformations (GCM), can cause neurological symptoms (such as headaches, focal neurologic deficits and seizures), which are probably related to hemorrhage and mass effect. GCM grow steadily in size over time, due to repetitive episodes of bleeding. The purpose of this paper is to document two case reports of patients with GCM, illustrate the radiological appearance, discuss the neurosurgical consequences, and to provide a literature analysis.
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