| Literature DB >> 27509908 |
Mario Zanaty1, Badih Daou2, Nohra Chalouhi2, Robert M Starke3, Pascal Jabbour2, David Hasan4.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: clipping; coiling; incidental cerebral aneurysm; small aneurysms; subarachnoid hemorrhage; unruptured cerebral aneurysms
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27509908 PMCID: PMC5015310 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.116.003936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501
Figure 1Early versus late uptake. Twenty‐five aneurysms were imaged to compare early (24 hours) vs late (72 hours) or no uptake. Seven of the 25 aneurysms demonstrated early uptake. Of these 7 aneurysms, 4 were clipped and 3 were observed. All 3 observed aneurysms progressed to rupture, including a <7‐mm aneurysm. On the other hand, 18 of the 25 aneurysms did not show early uptake. Of these, 9 were clipped and 9 were observed. None of the observed progressed to rupture, including a giant aneurysm (The authors elected not to treat the aneurysm due to the patient's age and morbidity).
Types A and B Risk Factors Dictating Treatment
| Types A and B Risk Factors | |
|---|---|
| Type A: factors that favor intervention over observation | Type B: factors that warrant a strong consideration for treatment independent of size |
| Active smoking | Young patient age |
| Arterial hypertension | Change in the size or configuration of the aneurysm |
| Posterior circulation aneurysm | Presence of multiple aneurysms |
| Prior subarachnoid hemorrhage | Multilobed configuration |
| Familial subarachnoid hemorrhage | Symptomatic aneurysm (emboli or mass effect) |
| Aspect ratio >3 | |
Chalouhi et al2 recommended that an aneurysm measuring 5 to 7 mm should be treated if any risk factor (type A or B) is present while aneurysms <5 mm in diameter should only be treated in the presence of 2 or more Type A risk factors or in the presence of any of the Type B risk factors. Reproduced with permission from Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group.2