AVM Treatment

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Precision Care for AVM Relief

AVM (Arteriovenous Malformation) treatment involves advanced, minimally invasive procedures like embolization, radiosurgery, or surgery to reduce rupture risk and restore brain function. Our expert-guided approach ensures accurate diagnosis, personalized care, and improved outcomes for patients with this complex neurological condition.

How we can Help?

We provide expert neurological care through accurate diagnosis, advanced treatments, and personalized support helping patients manage symptoms, recover safely, and improve their quality of life with compassion, precision, and long-term follow-up care.

Focused Treatment for Lasting Relief

AVM Precision Care provides expert-guided, minimally invasive treatments to reduce
rupture risk, restore brain function, and ensure safe, long-term neurological recovery

Accurate AVM Diagnosis

Advanced imaging tools help detect AVMs early, ensuring proper evaluation and timely, targeted treatment plans

Minimally Invasive Care

Procedures like embolization and radiosurgery offer safe, effective results with shorter recovery and minimal complications

Long-Term Recovery Support

Continued monitoring and personalized follow-up care help maintain brain health and prevent future AVM-related risks

Understanding Roots Preventing Future Risks

Recognizing causes and risk factors allows early intervention, helps prevent disease progression, and promotes better
outcomes in managing complex neurological and neurovascular conditions

Frequently Asked Questions

An AVM (Arteriovenous Malformation) is an abnormal tangle of blood vessels connecting arteries and veins, disrupting normal blood flow in the brain.

Most AVMs are congenital, meaning they are present at birth. However, the exact cause remains unknown in many cases.

AVMs are diagnosed using imaging techniques such as MRI, CT scan, or cerebral angiography for accurate visualization of the vascular structure.

Symptoms may include headaches, seizures, dizziness, vision changes, or neurological deficits, depending on the AVM's size and location in the brain.

Treatment may include embolization, radiosurgery, or surgical resection based on AVM size, location, symptoms, and rupture risk.

Yes, many AVMs can be successfully treated or removed, significantly reducing the risk of rupture and long-term complications.

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