Abstract

Management guidelines and recovery potentials for individuals presenting with poor clinical condition owing to an aneurysmal intracerebral hemorrhage are not well established. We assessed the outcome of a consecutive series of 6 patients with aneurysmal intracerebral hemorrhages presenting with Hunt and Hess clinical grade IV or V selected to undergo emergent hematoma evacuation and aneurysm clip obliteration. Their presenting clinical condition and neuroradiology were assessed, as well as early surgical results and follow-up outcome. The 2 women and 4 men were 30 to 59 years old. All 6 patients had profound neurological deficits on admission, with Glasgow Coma Scale scores of 4 to 9. Aneurysmal intracerebral hemorrhage diameters measured from 6 to 8 cm and were associated with 5 to 15 mm of midline shift. Surgical intervention was initiated within 3 hours of ictus in 5 patients and within 7 hours in one patient. All 6 patients survived, demonstrated clinical improvement postoperatively, and were transferred to rehabilitation centers 19 to 30 days after presentation. The Glasgow Outcome Scores were 2 to 3 with a minimum follow-up interval of 12 months. Four patients returned home and resumed independent activities of daily living; one required partial supervision. One patient remained in a chronic care facility. An acute management protocol, including aggressive neurosurgical intervention, with craniotomy for hematoma evacuation and aneurysm clip obliteration, can result in good neurological outcome in carefully selected, poor-grade patients with aneurysmal intracerebral hemorrhage.

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