| Literature DB >> 26844020 |
Tae-Wook Song1, Sung-Hyun Kim1, Seung-Hoon Jung1, Tae-Sun Kim1, Sung-Pil Joo1.
Abstract
Intracranial aneurysm rupture usually manifests with subarachnoid hemorrhage, often combined with intracerebral hemorrhage with intraventricular hemorrhage extension. In rare cases, however, these aneurysms present only as subdural hematomas. Recently, we treated a 48-years-old female patient who presented only with subdural hematoma. Interestingly, she did not have a history of trauma. Computed tomography angiography and digital subtraction angiography revealed a 5 × 3 mm sized aneurysm at the A3-A4 junction of the left anterior cerebral artery. On admission, emergency operation (clipping and hematoma evacuation) was performed to protect against re-bleeding. Along with postoperative intensive care, the patient returned to normal daily life with only a mild headache. Given that patients may present with atraumatic acute subdural hematoma, the clinician must bear in mind the possibility of intracranial vascular pathology and obtain angiographic scans to evaluate for any underlying conditions to prevent patient deaths.Entities:
Keywords: Ruptured aneurysm; Spontaneous subdural hematoma; Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Year: 2016 PMID: 26844020 PMCID: PMC4726640 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-1727-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1a Non-contrast brain CT shows acute subdural hematoma in the left fronto-tempo-parietal area (white arrow). The midline is shifted about 6 mm to the right. b, c Brain CTA reveals an A3–A4 junction aneurysm (black arrow). d 3D-DSA reveals an aneurysm at the A3–A4 junction
Fig. 2a Hematoma in the subdural space (arrow). b Aneurysm adhering to the falx (arrow). c Ruptured bled (arrow). d Complete clipping state
Fig. 3a, b Postoperative CTA revealed that previous subdural hematoma was evacuated and aneurysm was clipped without a remnant sac (arrow)
Summary of the cases of pure aSDH (without SAH) caused by ACA aneurysm rupture
| Authors | Age/sex | Signs and symptoms | Site of aSDH | Site of aneurysm | Treatment | Outcome (GOS) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Watanabe et al. ( | 51, M | Coma | Convexity and interhemispheric | Distal ACA | Evacuation and clipping | D (1) |
| Ragland et al. ( | 55, M | Coma | Convexity | AcomA | Evacuation | D (1) |
| Hatayama et al. ( | 55, M | Coma | Convexity and interhemispheric | Distal ACA | Evacuation and clipping | GR (5) |
| Hatayama et al. ( | 66, F | Coma | Convexity and interhemispheric | Distal ACA | Evacuation and clipping | MD (4) |
| Katsuno et al. ( | 63, F | Headache, nausea | Convexity and interhemispheric | Distal ACA | Evacuation and clipping | GR (5) |
| Gilad et al. ( | 47, M | Nausea, vomiting | Sella, spinal canal | AcomA | Coilinga | GR (5) |
| Tomaya et al. ( | 54, M | Headache, nausea | Convexity and tentorium | A1–A2 junction | Evacuation and clipping | GR (5) |
| Present case 2015 | 48, F | Headache | Convexity and interhemispheric | Distal ACA | Evacuation and clipping | GR (5) |
AcomA anterior communicating artery, ACA anterior cerebral artery, aSDH acute subdural hematoma, SAH subarachnoid hemorrhage, A1–A2 = anterior cerebral artery 1–2 portion, GOS Glasgow outcome scale [D = dead (1), PVS persistent vegetative state (2), SD severe disability (3), MD moderate disability (4), GR good recovery (5)]
aThe patient underwent only coiling and was discharged 5 days afterward
Fig. 4Overview and detailed depiction of the distal anterior cerebral artery aneurysm manifesting as an acute subdural hematoma