Modern Brain Arteriovenous Malformation Models: A Review

  • Bazil M
  • Shigematsu T
  • Berenstein A
  • et al.
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Research of William Hunter's hypothesized (then discovered) arteriovenous varix (now arteriovenous malformation [AVM]) has developed exponentially over the previous quarter-millennium. Virchow and Luschka's subsequent contributions (nearly 100 years later) by identifying an AVM of the brain and its congenital nature were 2 of the first significant developments made in the field. AVMs present as an erroneous connection (known as a fistula) between an artery and a vein that bypasses the capillary circulation. The arteries and arterioles contributing to the malformation are known as feeders which connect to the draining veins via a plexiform vascular network known as a nidus. Prior to the design of a synthetic anastomosis coupled with vessel ligation by Spetzler et al, animal models were largely based on embolization or study of the normal anatomy. The animal and early genetic models have been reported on at length and numerous times across the literature, but novel developments spanning the previous decade have ushered in a technological revolution of vascular modeling that warrants discussion and analysis.

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Bazil, M. J., Shigematsu, T., Berenstein, A., Bederson, J., & Fifi, J. T. (2022). Modern Brain Arteriovenous Malformation Models: A Review. Stroke: Vascular and Interventional Neurology, 2(4). https://doi.org/10.1161/svin.121.000335

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