Articles: subarachnoid-hemorrhage.
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The authors report the results of a retrospective review, between January 1986 and December 1991, of the results of early surgery and intrathecal thrombolytic therapy in 111 patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Effects on clot lysis, angiographic and symptomatic vasospasm, cerebral infarction, and clinical outcome were compared in 60 patients treated with urokinase (UK) 60,000 IU/d for 7 days (UK group), 22 patients treated with 0.042 to 1 mg tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) every 6 to 8 hours for 5 days (tPA group), and 29 patients who did not receive treatment with either thrombolytic agent (no-treatment group). The no-treatment group consisted of all patients treated before July 1986 and of patients in whom thrombolytic therapy was attempted but failed to start or in whom the therapy was not used intentionally because of small subarachnoid clot. ⋯ Meningitis was suspected in 16 patients of the UK group. However, in this relatively small retrospective series, there were no differences among the three groups in overall outcome at 3 months. This study indicates that postoperative intrathecal thrombolytic therapies, especially with less than 4 mg/d of tPA, are effective in lysing subarachnoid clot and preventing vasospasm and infarction safely.
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Neurological research · Feb 1994
Case ReportsAcute vasoparalysis after subarachnoid haemorrhage and cerebral trauma: general reflex phenomenon?
In patients with head trauma and consecutive acute diffuse cerebral swelling the sudden initial rise in intracranial pressure with subsequent impairment of cerebral blood flow is explained by engorgement due to vasoparalysis. How quickly hyperaemic brain swelling can occur is shown by a case report. The review of clinical and experimental data shows strong evidence that a general reflex phenomenon could be the result of this initial vasoparalysis in acute diffuse cerebral swelling in head trauma and acute aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage.
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Although most subdural hematomas are considered to be venous in origin, they may also be of arterial origin. When subdural bleeding is due to the rupture of an intracranial aneurysm, most commonly at the middle cerebral or internal carotid arteries, the amount of subdural blood is usually small and of no clinical importance. We describe two patients with subdural hematomas secondary to rupture of an intracranial aneurysm, who needed prompt surgical treatment. ⋯ In the second patient the aneurysm was at the anterior communicating artery and rebled into the subdural space directly through a right intraparenchymatous frontobasal hematoma. The most probable mechanism of subdural bleeding in our two patients was the existence of adhesions between the aneurysm and the arachnoid due to previous minor hemorrhages. The indication of cerebral angiography in a patient with subdural hematoma is based mainly upon the existence of meningeal signs, the presence of blood in more than one intracranial compartment or the rapid progression of bleeding.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jan 1994
Case ReportsRecurrence of ICA-PCoA aneurysms after neck clipping.
Between 1975 and 1992, 2211 patients underwent aneurysmal neck clipping at the Nara Medical University clinic and associated hospitals. The aneurysm in 931 of these patients was situated at the junction of the internal carotid artery (ICA) and posterior communicating artery (PCoA). Seven patients were readmitted 4 to 17 years after the first surgery because of regrowth and rupture of an ICA-PCoA aneurysmal sac that had arisen from the residual neck. ⋯ Type 2 includes aneurysms in which the proximal portion of a previous clip is situated at the corner of the ICA and aneurysmal neck and the distal portion on the enlarged dome of the aneurysm, because the sac is regrowing from a portion of the residual neck. In this type of aneurysm, a Sugita fenestrated clip can occlude the residual neck, overriding the old clip. Classifying these aneurysms into two groups is very useful from a surgical point of view because it is possible to apply a new clip without removing the old clip, which was found to be adherent to surrounding tissue.