Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital, Lund, Sweden
Abstract
Abstract
In a consecutive series of 160 patients in Hunt and Hess Neurological Grades I to III who were operated upon for a ruptured supratentorial aneurysm within 3 days after the hemorrhage, 42 patients (26%) had an unfavorable outcome. Delayed ischemic cerebral dysfunction with permanent deficit accounted for the unfavorable outcome in 18 patients (43% of all unfavorable results or 11% of the total series), whereas the unfavorable outcome was due to deficit ascribed to surgical trauma in 11 patients (26% of all unfavorable results or 7% of the total series) and to the initial hemorrhage in 7 patients (17% of all unfavorable results or 4% of the total series). Impaired outflow of cerebrospinal fluid with shunt dependency occurred in 3% of the total series. Of the patients with an unfavorable outcome, 17 (40%) had had arterial hypertension before the hemorrhage. The incidence of unfavorable outcome in good grade patients (Grades I and II) was not influenced by timing of operation (Day 1, 2, or 3 after hemorrhage). The results favor the opinion that it is principally the patient's condition during the acute stage that determines the outcome.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Surgery
Cited by
139 articles.
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