Abstract

The factors contributing to neurological deterioration after early surgery for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) were investigated. One hundred forty-two patients who underwent surgery within 3 days after SAH and recovered consciousness were divided into three age groups: 49 years of age or younger (Group A), 50 to 64 years old (Group B), and 65 years of age or older (Group C). Among these, 40 patients (28%) overall showed neurological deterioration; these cases were analyzed in detail. Although the highest incidence of deterioration was noted in patients in Group C (42%), angiographic vasospasm, quantified by measuring the change in the ratio of the diameters of the intracranial arteries to the extracranial internal carotid artery, was negatively correlated with age. In elderly patients, the severity of angiographic vasospasm was not related to the reversibility of symptoms or the outcome. At the time of aggravation, associated systemic complications such as cardiac decompensation, hypoxia, and electrolyte imbalance were noted in two (18%) of 11 patients in Group A, five (38%) of 13 in Group B, and eight (50%) of 16 in Group C, and these complications were significantly correlated with poor outcome in Group C. Although arterial narrowing is a leading cause of neurological deterioration after early aneurysmal surgery, the etiology is often multifactorial, especially in elderly patients, suggesting that hypervolemic therapy, which might provoke various complications, should be performed carefully under intensive monitoring.

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