Purpose: To describe symptomatic pulmonary emboli from brain arteriovenous malformation embolization with liquid acrylates and to analyze the reasons for these complications and describe preventive techniques.
Methods: The clinical records of 182 patients embolized with acrylate glue since 1978 for treatment of brain AVMs were searched for evidence of symptomatic pulmonary complications. Originally iso-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate and more recently n-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate were used in all patients. Arteriovenous malformation morphology, amounts and techniques of glue injection, and clinical and radiologic investigations in the symptomatic patients were recorded.
Results: Three patients had pulmonary symptoms within 48 hours of glue injection. One patient with a left frontal arteriovenous malformation had embolization with an isobutyl-2-cyanoacrylate/pantopaque/acetic acid mixture; severe pleuritic chest pain developed 2 days later. One patient with a left temporal and one with a left cerebellar arteriovenous malformation had embolization with n-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate/lipiodol mixtures; a cough, pleuritic chest pain, and bloody sputum developed in both within 24 hours. Two patients experienced a significant drop in PO2. No flow-arrest techniques were used for any of the injections in these three patients. All patients demonstrated significant changes on chest x-ray and CT chest examinations. All were treated conservatively and recovered spontaneously.
Conclusions: Symptomatic pulmonary complications can occur after acrylate glue injection, particularly when delivery systems without flow arrest are used in high-flow vascular brain lesions. Techniques using acetic acid to delay polymerization time and "sandwich" techniques in which glue is pushed with dextrose are also more susceptible to this complication.