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Journal ArticleDOI

Risk of rupture of a second aneurysm in patients with multiple aneurysms.

Olli Heiskanen, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1970 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 3, pp 295-299
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TLDR
Treatment of the symptomatic lesion is commonly considered adequate in patients with multiple aneurysms and in four instances the second hemorrhage was fatal, as shown by autopsy.
Abstract
HERE are different opinions about the mortality associated with multiple aneurysms. MeKissock, et al., 2 state that multiple aneurysms are associated with a higher natural mortality than single aneurysms. In the Cooperative Study of Intracranial Aneurysms and Subarachnoid Hemorrhage, 3 the multiple aneurysm patients had the same prognosis for survival as those with single aneurysms. According to McKissock, recurrent hemorrhage virtually always occurs from the original lesion. Nishioka 3 found little evidence to suggest that more than one aneurysm would rupture within the followup time in the Cooperative Study. Therefore, treatment of the symptomatic lesion is commonly considered adequate. At the Neurosurgical Clinic of the University Central Hospital during the years 1957-1968, we have operated on 84 patients with multiple aneurysms in whom the ruptured aneurysm was identified with certainty at the operation. Ten of these patients had a recurrent hemorrhage during followup periods varying from 4 months to 11 years. In eight of these 10 patients the recurrent hemorrhage was shown to be due to rupture of another previously unruptured aneurysm, in four instances the second hemorrhage was fatal. In one of the remaining patients the second hemorrhage did occur from the original lesion, as shown by autopsy. In the other case, autopsy was not performed, and it is not known which of the aneurysms bled. Case Reports

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Assessing the constancy of intracranial aneurysm growth rates.

TL;DR: Koffijberg et al. as mentioned in this paper evaluated the plausibility of a constant growth rate for intracranial aneurysms via mathematical modeling and concluded that the actual growth process must be episodic.
Book ChapterDOI

The Management of Intracranial Arterial Aneurysms in the Acute Stage

TL;DR: Aneurysm surgery must be viewed in the perspective of the country where it is practised; in neurosurgery Finland is at the moment forced to adopt many of the attitudes of developing countries.
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Treatment of multiple intracranial aneurysms in the anterior circulation--case report.

TL;DR: Nine additional aneurysms were found in a 69-year-old female who underwent surgery for subarachnoid hemorrhage due to a ruptured intracranialAneurysm and four were clipped in a second operation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple intracranial aneurysms of inflammatory origin with subarachnoid hemorrhage.

TL;DR: A 46‐year‐old Japanese woman with a long‐standing history of bronchial asthma died of subarachnoid hemorrhage with intraventricular spread, during medication by a large dose of corticosteroids, and eighteen isolated arterial aneurysms were found around the circle of Willis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long term prognosis of symptomatic and asymptomatic cerebral aneurysms.

TL;DR: It is thought that all diagnosed cerebral aneurysms must be treated surgically, regardless of the obtained follow-up results in cases, and the natural history of asymptomatic aneurYSms is unclear regarding the risk of bleeding.
References
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