• Neurosurgical review · Oct 1999

    Review Case Reports

    Dissecting aneurysm of basilar artery presenting with recurrent subarachnoid hemorrhage.

    • T Nakahara, H Satoh, T Mizoue, H Kawamoto, Y Kohmo, and K Kurisu.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Hiroshima University School of Medicine, Japan. tnakahar@iwa.att.ne.jp
    • Neurosurg Rev. 1999 Oct 1; 22 (2-3): 155-8.

    AbstractSpontaneous basilar dissecting aneurysms secondary to subarachnoid hemorrhage are rare, usually presenting with ischemia rather than a subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). A 63-year-old man who had SAH repeatedly from a ruptured basilar dissecting aneurysm was treated with endovascular occlusion of the unilateral vertebral artery. Postoperative angiograms 1 month after the procedure showed complete obliteration of the aneurysm. The clinical follow-up at 20 months showed no evidence of recurrent hemorrhage.

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