Head and Neck ImagingArteriovenous fistula, head and neck
abnormal communication between an
artery and a
vein that bypasses the normal capillary bed. This term is best reserved for traumatic communications (
Fig.1), while a
congenital lesion is better described as an
arteriovenous malformation head and neck.
Near the skull base, an arteriovenous fistula may cause tinnitus. In a dural arteriovenous fistula, there is an abnormal communication between a branch of the carotid artery and a dural sinus; this is a rare lesion, but a more common cause of tinnitus than a cerebral arteriovenous malformation. A direct arteriovenous fistula may occur in the vertebral artery (with the surrounding venous plexus) or in the internal carotid artery (usually with the cavernous sinus), or may involve a branch of the external carotid artery.
RH
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Patient with post-traumatic pulsatile swelling in neck. Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1-weighted spin echo image (a) shows a small enhancing region, containing some flow voids, in the right sternocleidomastoid muscle (arrow). Selective arteriography (b) reveals a hypertrophic muscular branch of the occipital artery, feeding a collection of tortuous vessels, and early drainage to the internal jugular vein (5).
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Arteriovenous fistula, head and neck, Fig.1 (a) | | Arteriovenous fistula, head and neck, Fig.1 (b) | |