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Cavernoma Treatment in Istanbul

A cavernoma — medically, a cavernous malformation — is a cluster of abnormally structured, slow-flowing blood vessels within the brain or spinal cord. Most cavernomas cause no symptoms and are found by chance on an MRI taken for another reason, and they can stay silent for years; some, however, cause seizures, headache or, depending on location, neurological symptoms. The most asked-about issue is the bleeding risk: cavernomas can bleed, but this bleeding is mostly not sudden and devastating as in a brain aneurysm — it is more limited and slow. Precisely for this reason, the most common “decision” in cavernoma is not surgery but careful observation. This page honestly explains which cavernoma is observed and which requires surgery, for patients reaching us in Istanbul.

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What Is a Cavernoma, and How Does It Differ From an Aneurysm?

A cavernoma is a vascular structure made of small blood-filled spaces, resembling a mulberry or blackberry, with slow blood flow. This feature fundamentally distinguishes it from a brain aneurysm: an aneurysm is a balloon on a high-pressure artery and, when it ruptures, causes sudden, severe bleeding (a brain hemorrhage); a cavernoma is low-pressure and its bleeding is usually smaller and more limited. For this reason a cavernoma is often not an emergency. A person may have a single cavernoma, or, in familial forms, many cavernomas. What matters is correctly assessing the cavernoma’s location, size and whether it has bled before.

Symptoms and Diagnosis

The majority of cavernomas cause no symptoms and are found by chance. When they do cause symptoms, the most common is a seizure; cavernomas located near the brain surface in particular can lead to epilepsy. Depending on location, headache, weakness, sensory changes, or — in brainstem cavernomas — symptoms such as double vision and imbalance can also occur. The gold standard for diagnosis is MRI; a cavernoma is often invisible on computed tomography and even on standard angiography. Special MRI sequences sensitive to bleeding products and to small cavernomas (gradient echo / SWI) are particularly valuable both for making the diagnosis and for detecting additional cavernomas that might be missed.

The Most Common Decision: Observation

The most common decision in managing a cavernoma is not surgery but careful observation. For a cavernoma that is asymptomatic, located in a deep or critical region and has not bled before, the most appropriate approach is usually to follow it with regular MRI and, if needed, to keep seizures under control with medication. This is because the annual bleeding risk of such cavernomas is generally low, and an unnecessary operation can do more harm than the cavernoma itself. The decision to observe is not passive “waiting” but an active strategy that continually weighs the bleeding risk and symptoms; if the picture changes, the plan changes.

In Which Situation Does Surgery Come to the Fore?

Surgery comes to the fore in selected situations where the cavernoma causes a clear problem: recurrent bleeding, seizures not controlled by medication, or progressive neurological symptoms are foremost among these. The aim of surgery is to remove the cavernoma completely with the least damage to the surrounding healthy tissue, because a remaining fragment can bleed again. The deciding factor here is the cavernoma’s location: a cavernoma near the brain surface or easy to reach can be removed with low risk, whereas in critical regions such as the brainstem or deep nuclei the decision to operate is made far more cautiously. In these cases neuro-navigation, the microscope and, when needed, neuromonitoring help reach the cavernoma safely while preserving healthy tissue.

Realistic Expectations and Risks

When an accessible cavernoma is removed completely, the bleeding risk arising from that region disappears, and seizures often markedly decrease or come under control; this is surgery’s strongest point. However, no outcome can be guaranteed and every operation has risks: bleeding, infection and, especially depending on the cavernoma’s location, temporary or permanent neurological effects. In critical regions such as the brainstem these risks rise; so the decision there is always made by weighing the expected benefit against the possible harm. The role of radiosurgery (Gamma Knife) in cavernoma is limited and debated, and arises only in selected cases. We determine the most suitable path for you — observation or surgery — honestly, together with your cavernoma’s location, bleeding history and your symptoms.

Quellen

1Greenberg MS. Greenberg's Handbook of Neurosurgery. 10th ed. Thieme; 2023:1524-1530.
2Winn HR, ed. Youmans Neurological Surgery. 6th ed. Saunders; 2011:4022-4028.
3Akers A, et al. Synopsis of Guidelines for the Clinical Management of Cerebral Cavernous Malformations. Neurosurgery. 2017.
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Häufig gestellte Fragen

I have a cavernoma but no complaints — do I have to be operated on?

Most often, no. For cavernomas that are asymptomatic, have not bled before and are located in a deep/critical region, the most common decision is observation with regular MRI, because the annual bleeding risk is generally low. Surgery comes to the fore in situations such as recurrent bleeding, resistant seizures or progressive symptoms.

Does a cavernoma rupture suddenly like a brain aneurysm?

No. A cavernoma is a low-pressure, slow-flow structure; its bleeding is usually not sudden and devastating as in an aneurysm but more limited and slow. For this reason most cavernomas are not an emergency, though they still need to be assessed according to their location.

Can a cavernoma in the brainstem be operated on?

It can, but only in very carefully selected situations. The brainstem is a critical region; the decision to operate there is made by carefully weighing the expected benefit against the possible risk, when there is a strong justification such as recurrent bleeding or progressive symptoms. In some cases observation may be safer.

I am in Istanbul — can you assess my MRI remotely first?

Yes. You can send your MRI images (preferably ones including gradient echo / SWI sequences) and your symptom history from Istanbul via phone or WhatsApp (+90 533 075 72 94) and receive a preliminary assessment. If appropriate, you will be invited for an examination, and additional imaging will be planned if needed.

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