Abstract
We report the case of a 29-year-old man who presented with a sudden headache. Computed tomography showed a small intraventricular hemorrhage in the left lateral ventricle. Cerebral angiograms suggested rupture of a coexisting feeder aneurysm in the left temporal cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVM). The left proximal middle cerebral artery, a major feeding artery, was occluded near the AVM, with development of abnormal blood supply, such as in moyamoya-like vessels to the nidus. After endovascular embolization of the coexisting feeder aneurysm and feeding arteries, the patient underwent volume-staged Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKS). Follow-up angiograms performed 4.5 years after the last GKS confirmed complete disappearance of the AVM. Around 4.8 years after GKS, the patient required surgical intervention to develop delayed cyst formation; however, the postoperative course was uneventful.