Cerebral Aneurysm

Treatment

Treatment

Two surgical options are available for treating cerebral aneurysms, both of which carry some risk to the patient (such as possible damage to other blood vessels, the potential for aneurysm recurrence and rebleeding, and the risk of post-operative stroke).

Microvascular clipping

Microvascular clipping involves cutting off the flow of blood to the aneurysm.  Under anesthesia, a section of the skull is removed and the aneurysm is located.  The neurosurgeon uses a microscope to isolate the blood vessel that feeds the aneurysm and places a small, metal, clothespin-like clip on the aneurysm’s neck, halting its blood supply.  The clip remains in the patient and prevents the risk of future bleeding.  The piece of the skull is then replaced and the scalp is closed.  Clipping has been shown to be highly effective, depending on the location, shape, and size of the aneurysm.  In general, aneurysms that are completely clipped surgically do not return.

A related procedure is an occlusion, in which the surgeon clamps off (occludes) the entire artery that leads to the aneurysm.  This procedure is often performed when the aneurysm has damaged the artery.  An occlusion is sometimes accompanied by a bypass, in which a small blood vessel is surgically grafted to the brain artery, rerouting the flow of blood away from the section of the damaged artery.

Endovascular embolization

Endovascular embolization is an alternative to surgery.  Once the patient has been anesthetized, the doctor inserts a hollow plastic tube (a catheter) into an artery (usually in the groin) and threads it, using angiography, through the body to the site of the aneurysm.  Using a guide wire, detachable coils (spirals of platinum wire) or small latex balloons are passed through the catheter and released into the aneurysm.  The coils or balloons fill the aneurysm, block it from circulation, and cause the blood to clot, which effectively destroys the aneurysm.  The procedure may need to be performed more than once during the patient’s lifetime.

Patients who receive treatment for aneurysm must remain in bed until the bleeding stops.  Underlying conditions, such as high blood pressure, should be treated.  Other treatment for cerebral aneurysm is symptomatic and may include anticonvulsants to prevent seizures and analgesics to treat headache.  Vasospasm can be treated with calcium channel-blocking drugs and sedatives may be ordered if the patient is restless.  A shunt may be surgically inserted into a ventricle several months following rupture if the buildup of cerebrospinal fluid is causing harmful pressure on surrounding tissue.  Patients who have suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage often need rehabilitative, speech, and occupational therapy to regain lost function and learn to cope with any permanent disability.

 

Contact NCTVI

Interventional Neuroradiology Clinic

2801 K Street, Suite 240
Sacramento, CA 95816

Phone (916) 925-9526

Fax (916) 925-9515

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Our Specialists

Lotfi Hacein-Bey, M.D.

NeuroInterventional Radiologist

Dr. Lotfi Hacein-Bey, a board-certified neuroradiologist and interventional neuroradiologist, earned his medical degree at the Algiers Institute for Medical Sciences in Algiers, Algeria, where he completed internships in Surgery, Medicine, Pediatrics, Obstetrics and Gynecology. Dr. Hacein-Bey went on to complete a residency in Radiology at St. Louis Hospital and the University of Paris VII in Paris, France, where he also received post-doctoral training in Psychiatry, Pharmacology and Toxicology, Gynecology and Contraception. Dr. Hacein-Bey then completed subspecialty fellowships in Neuroradiology and Interventional Neuroradiology at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, and in Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiology at the Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, Harvard Medical School. Highly regarded for his clinical expertise, Dr. Hacein-Bey is frequently invited to lecture at scientific meetings nationally and internationally. He is widely published and has held several academic appointments at top ranking national institutions. Since 2005, he has been a recipient of the Best Doctors in America award (2005-2006, 2007-2008 and 2009-2010), and was recognized in 2007 as one of America’s Top Radiologists.