Spinal dural arteriovenous fistula

Last revised by Rohit Sharma on 15 Feb 2024

Spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas (SDAVF) are the most common type of spinal vascular malformation, accounting for ~70% of all such lesions.

This article specifically relates to spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas. For a discussion of intracranial dural arteriovenous fistulas refer to the main article: dural arteriovenous fistula.

The incidence of SDAVF peaks in the 5th and 6th decades and males are more commonly affected than females 2.

SDAVFs cause symptoms through venous hypertension and congestion of the cord with edema. The most common clinical presentations are progressive pain, lower extremity weakness or sensory changes. Sphincter dysfunction may also occur. The onset of symptoms is insidious with a slowly progressive course occurring over several years. There is often a significant delay between presentation and diagnosis.

Hemorrhage is very rare but occasionally encountered, and may be a source of unexplained subarachnoid hemorrhage 2,7.

These fistulae are abnormal direct connections between a radicular/radiculomeningeal artery and a radicular/pial vein in the dura of an adjacent nerve root sleeve. 85% of SDAVFs consist of a single transdural arterial feeder, however, there are cases with many arterial feeders originating from either a single or multiple levels that may be either unilateral or bilateral 2.

The direct arterial inflow into the venous system raises the pressure within the coronal venous plexus, which is valveless. The coronal venous plexus dilates and venous drainage of the cord decreases, causing venous congestion and intramedullary edema (congestive or venous hypertensive myelopathy). Cord ischemia and infarction may result. Nearly 60% of SDAVFs are spontaneous, with the remainder being caused by trauma 3.

There is typically cord enlargement in the lower thoracic region and conus medullaris, with signal change involving multiple spinal segments. The segmental level of cord enlargement and signal change does not correlate with the location of the fistula 5.

  • T1: intramedullary hypointensity and flow voids on the cord surface may be seen

  • T2

    • diffuse multilevel (including being a longitudinally extensive spinal cord lesion) intramedullary hyperintensity (due to edema) - most sensitive finding 13; regardless of the location of the fistula, the T2 hyperintensity involves the conus medullaris in up to 90% of cases because of orthostasis

    • the exception is SDAVFs of the upper cervical spine (C1-C2) which often drain intracranially and present more commonly with subarachnoid hemorrhage 5

    • T2 hypointensity in the periphery of the cord 11, which is thought to represent pial capillaries containing deoxyhemoglobin secondary to venous hypertension 

    • prominent serpiginous intradural extramedullary flow voids - most specific finding

      • usually span more than three segments on the dorsal and sometimes ventral aspects of the cord

      • vessels may be large enough to give the surface of the cord a scalloped appearance

      • with significant cord swelling, the veins can be compressed by the mass effect and not be detectable on imaging 5

  • T1 C+ (Gd)

    • patchy intramedullary enhancement is often seen (due to the breakdown of the blood-brain barrier because of either chronic infarction or a capillary leak phenomenon secondary to venous hypertension) 

    • serpentine enhancing veins on the cord surface

  • contrast-enhanced MRA

    • helps determine the segmental level of the fistula in order to guide selective catheter angiography 

If MRI is contraindicated, the following may be performed:

  • CT angiography: may successfully localize the fistula in up to 75% of cases 5 

  • CT myelography: may demonstrate tortuous filling defects due to dilated veins 5

DSA is the gold standard test for confirming the diagnosis and it provides options for treatment. It is a time consuming and potentially dangerous investigation as dissection of a vessel can potentially lead to cord ischemia. 

The site of maximal MRI abnormality is not a reliable indicator of the location of the fistula, which can be many levels away. As such a complete spinal angiogram consists of selective catheterization of the bilateral 8:

Treatment options include endovascular or surgical occlusion of the shunt.

  • endovascular occlusion

    • performed with either cyanoacrylate glue or Onyx after superselective catheterization of the radiculomeningeal artery supplying the fistula

    • occlusion rates of up to 85% have been reported 5

    • endovascular treatment is contraindicated if the radicular artery also supplies the anterior spinal artery; embolization of a fistula that supplies a posterior spinal artery remains controversial 5

  • surgery: surgical occlusion consists of a targeted laminectomy and intradural exploration with coagulation or disconnection of the draining vein; occlusion rates as high as 98% have been reported 5

After treatment of the fistula, the T2 hyperintensity, prominent flow voids, and enhancement should decrease with time but can persist for up to a year. These postoperative imaging features do not correlate with clinical outcome 5. If treated early, motor and sensory function can be improved or stabilized in most cases. Pain and bowel and bladder dysfunction are only reversed in a minority of patients 5.

Notably, patients may worsen if initially treated with corticosteroid therapy, which may have been given if an inflammatory pathology such as transverse myelitis was initially suspected 15.

General imaging differential considerations include:

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