Pulmonary arteriovenous aneurysm that has a systemic blood supply are rare, and it has the same hemodynamic consequences as arteriovenous fistulas of the general circulation have [1-3]. The bronchial arteries, internal mammary arteries, or aorta are the primary and immediate sources of the systemic arterial blood [2,5]. In our case, the fistula was supplied from pulmonary and bronchial arteries. We realized it during the operation, and this condition did not prevent to success of the operation. Chest radiographs are abnormal in approximately 98% of patients with PAVA. A single peripheral circumscribed noncalcified lesion connected by blood vessels to the hilus of the lung is the most common finding. Computed tomography scan usually demonstrates the lesion sufficiently well to be diagnostic. Angiography, however, is more reliable in the analysis of the angioarchitecture and is a necessary follow-up of the CT scan in those patients who are undergone interventional management of the fistulas [1,2,4].
Dines and co-workers [3] reported 11% mortality, and 26% morbidity rate in untreated patients followed for a mean of 6 years. Currently, most authors recommend that when lesions are symptomatic and enlarging or associated with complications, they should be treated [2]. Surgical excision of an isolated, single pulmonary arteriovenous fistula is successful, with minimal mortality and morbidity and little chance of recurrence of the lesion [2]. Because most fistulas are located subpleurally, they can be removed with conservative local resections. But like our case, same fistulas are located centrally, too large, and connected great vessels. Thus lobectomy may be required. However, patients unfit for surgery or those with multiple and bilateral lesions posed a difficult therapeutic problem. Selective radiographically guided embolization of multiple pulmonary arteriovenous fistulas that are unsuitable for surgical resection has proved to be a valuable therapeutic modality [1,2,6].
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