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Computerized tomography in subarachnoid hemorrhage
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1980
Year
Computed TomographyNeurovascular DiseaseComputerized TomographyStrokeOccult Basal AneurysmsIntracranial PressureBrain InjuryNeurologyNeuropathologyRadiologyHealth SciencesFifty PatientsMedical ImagingOphthalmologyRuptured AneurysmNeuroimagingCerebral Blood FlowMedical Image ComputingDigital Subtraction AngiographySubarachnoid HemorrhageBiomedical ImagingMedicine
Fifty patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage were investigated by both computerized tomography (CT), within 5 days of onset, and complete cerebral angiography. CT showed blood in the basal cisterns in 38 of the 42 patients with a demonstrable aneurysm, but in only 1 of 8 patients with a negative angiogram (p less than 0.001). This means that: (1) blood in the basal cisterns on CT almost certainly indicates a ruptured aneurysm, and (2) unexplained subarachnoid hemorrhages are unlikely to be caused by occult basal aneurysms.