Brain aneurysms and hemorrhages due to cerebral vascular bundle are the most serious and most severe patients in neurosurgery. A brain aneurysm is a bubble that forms on the arteries in the brain. These are a type of vascular disorder that usually occurs spontaneously in people with a genetic predisposition. When these bubbles bleed, they cause sudden loss of consciousness and fainting, epileptic seizures, and vomiting. Its incidence in the community is approximately 8%. Despite this high rate, most of the patients complete their lives without bleeding. However, in case of bleeding, they cause a life-threatening situation. Unfortunately, approximately half of the patients with cerebral aneurysm bleeding die before they can be brought to the hospital. Therefore, patients with an aneurysm detected in the brain, whether they have bleeding or not, must be treated.
There are two basic treatment modalities of brain aneurysms and cerebral vascular bundle. The first of these is the occlusion of the bubble by entering through the vein from the groin without opening the head, and the other is to put a clip (ie latch) at the bottom of the bubble with open surgery of the brain. Although the first method seems quite innocent, it cannot be applied to every aneurysm, sometimes the bubble may burst during the application and the patient will be lost, or the material used for occlusion may interfere with the normal circulation and cause more serious consequences. In addition, it has a very high cost. The main treatment we recommend for aneurysms is open surgery.
