CNI Stroke Center
701 East Hampden Ave., Suite 415
Englewood, CO 80113
Phone: (303) 597-1724
Fax: (303) 788-7666
E-mail: CNI Email


Swedish Medical Center and CNI's Stroke Center form the only Accredited
Comprehensive Stroke Center in the region
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Brain Aneurysm
What is a brain aneurysm?
A brain aneurysm, also called a cerebral or intracranial aneurysm, is
an abnormal bulging outward of one of the arteries in the brain. Often
this wall is weakened by disease, injury or an abnormality present at
birth. Aneurysms are often caused or made worse by high blood pressure.
It is estimated that up to one in 15 people in the United States will
develop a brain aneurysm during their lifetime.
Unruptured Aneurysm: An unruptured
aneurysm can be diagnosed and treated to prevent rupturing with
a procedure called "clipping" where a neurosurgeon goes
in and places special clips over the aneurysm to prevent it from breaking.
Another way to treat it is by coiling where the interventional
neuroradiologist goes in and places special small coils in the aneurysm
to fill obliterate it and keep it from rupturing. Learn
more about treaments below.
Ruptured Aneurysm: When a blood vessel
on the brain's surface ruptures and bleeds into the space between
the brain and the skull (but not into the brain itself), it's called a
subarachnoid hemorrhage, which can lead to a hemorrhagic stroke,
brain damage and death. When an artery in the brain bursts, flooding
the surrounding tissue with blood, it's called a cerebral hemorrhage.
The main goals of treatment once an aneurysm
has ruptured are to stop the bleeding and potential permanent damage to
the brain and to reduce the risk of recurrence.
Symptoms of brain aneurysms
Ruptured Cerebral Aneurysm Symptoms
Sometimes patients describing "the worst headache in my life"
are actually experiencing one of the symptoms of brain aneurysms related
to having a rupture. Other ruptured cerebral aneurysm symptoms include:
- Nausea and vomiting
- Stiff neck or neck pain
- Blurred vision or double vision
- Pain above and behind the eye
- Dilated pupils
- Sensitivity to light
- Loss of sensation
Unruptured Cerebral Aneurysm Symptoms
Before an aneurysm ruptures, patients often experience no symptoms of
brain aneurysms. In about 40 percent of cases, people with unruptured
aneurysms will experience some or all of the following cerebral aneurysm
symptoms:
- Peripheral vision deficits
- Thinking or processing problems
- Speech complications
- Perceptual problems
- Sudden changes in behavior
- Loss of balance and coordination
- Decreased concentration
- Short-term memory difficulty
- Fatigue
Because the symptoms of brain aneurysms can also be associated with other
medical conditions, diagnostic neuroradiology is regularly used to identify
both ruptured and unruptured brain aneurysms.
How is an aneurysm detected?
Several
imaging techniques, such as X-ray angiography, MRI (magnetic resonance
imaging) or computed tomography (CT), are used to detect aneurysms.
In the image to the right, an angiogram shows a left-sided aneurysm.
An aneurysm may be small and not cause symptoms. A doctor will want
to check it regularly to see if it is enlarging. Symptoms of an
aneurysm depend on where it is located. Aneurysms in the brain can
cause impaired vision and headaches. The larger an aneurysm becomes,
the more likely it is to burst.
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How is a brain aneurysm treated?
Surgery or minimally-invasive endovascular coiling techniques
can be used in the treatment of brain aneurysms. However, not all
aneurysms are treated at the time of diagnosis or are amenable to
both forms of treatment. Patients need to consult a neurovascular
specialist to determine if they are candidates for either treatment.
"Clipping" Surgery
When possible, surgery is performed to prevent further re-bleeding
episodes. The aneurysm is dissected out using microdissection techniques,
and a metal clip is placed across the aneurysm neck, so that no
more blood flows into it. Learn
more about this on the CNI Neurovascular Surgery Service page.
Detachable Coil Embolization - Minimally Invasive
Aneurysms
may be treated by placing detachable platinum coils (called the
Guglielmi detachable coil (GDC)) inside the aneurysm. The
goal of the endovascular treatment is to pack the aneurysm tightly
to close off blood flow into the aneurysm thereby preventing its
rupture, or to reduce mass effect. These small, flexible wire platinum
coils are delivered and inserted into the aneurysm using a catheter.
The image here shows the subarachnoid hemorrhage (brain aneurysm)
was treated by using detachable coil embolization. Learn more about
this on the CNI Neurovascular
Surgery Service page and Interventional
Neuroradiology page, as well as from the related website links
in the right column.
CNI's treatment team for aneurysm includes:
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CNI Aneurysm Treatment Team
CNI Brain Aneurysm Support Group
for Survivors and Caregivers
501 E. Hampden Ave.
2nd Floor Conference Rooms (Pine B & C)
Swedish Medical Center
6:30 – 8:00 pm
Third Monday every month
Peer Contact and Support
Carol Gill, an aneurysm survivor and her husband Chuck Smith, founders
of the Colorado Brain Aneurysm Foundation Support Group, are available
to share their personal experience and offer support. They can be reached
at 303-779-1821 or bafcolorado@msn.com
Related Websites:
How Common Are
Brain Aneurysms?
According to the American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic
Neuroradiology (ASITN), the facts about brain aneurysm include:
- Approximately 0.2 to 3 percent of people
with a brain aneurysm may suffer from bleeding per year.
- The annual incidence of aneurysmal subarachnoid
hemorrhage in the U.S. exceeds 30,000 people. Ten to 15 percent of
these patients will die before reaching the hospital and over 50
percent will die within the first thirty days after rupture. Of those
who survive, about half suffer some permanent neurological deficit.
- Brain aneurysms can occur
in people of all ages, but are most commonly detected in those ages
35 to 60 .
- Women are actually more likely to get a brain aneurysm than
men, with a ratio of 3:2.
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