Abstract

Over the last decade there have been significant changes in the management of patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). Many of these changes, such as haemodilutional, hypervolaemic, hypertensive therapy and the use of calcium channel blockers, have been directed at the prevention and treatment of vasospasm. The angiograms of a contemporary series of 56 consecutive surgically treated patients with aneurysmal SAH were examined to compare angiographic vasospasm with that seen in historical studies. The time course of angiographic vasospasm was found to be broadly similar to that reported in previous studies, with onset after day 3 following SAH, maximal narrowing during the second week, and resolution after day 16. The times of peak narrowing and resolution were slightly earlier in previous studies. 30% of patients had clinical vasospasm (delayed neurological deficit for which other causes had been excluded), and these patients had a trend to more severe angiographic narrowing than those without clinical vasospasm, particularly in the second week following SAH. 44 angiograms were performed between days 1-3 post SAH and repeated between days 4-16. 95% of these showed arterial narrowing at the second angiogram. Patients not achieving an independent outcome tended to have had both more clinical vasospasm and more severe angiographic spasm than those achieving independence. It is concluded that angiographic vasospasm remains a common occurrence in the modern era, and continues to be associated with clinical events and a poor outcome.

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