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Importance of the recognition of a warning leak as a sign of a ruptured intracranial aneurysm
73
Citations
14
References
2009
Year
Ruptured Intracranial AneurysmWarning LeakInterventional NeuroradiologyMedicineCerebrospinal FluidPatient SafetyDiagnosisDead PtsNormal Mental OutcomeIntracranial PressureBrain InjuryNeurologyNeurovascular DiseaseCerebral Blood FlowNeuropathologyStrokeEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
In the Danish Aneurysm Study 1076 patients (pts.) were admitted with an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage in the 5-year period 1978-83. A warning leak (WL), defined as a sudden episode of headache, vomiting, nuchal pain, dizziness or drowsiness, was identified in 166 pts. (15.4%). In 99 of these the episode was evaluated by a physician but misdiagnosed. A 2-year follow-up examination of the 99 pts. showed that 30 pts. had a normal mental outcome and 43 pts. were dead. If these patients were correctly diagnosed after the WL, when they were in Hunt grade 1-2, the outcome-figures would probably have been significantly better. A theoretical transfer of the outcome-probabilities for pts. in Hunt grade 1-2 to the above mentioned 99 pts. would result in 66 pts. with a normal mental outcome and 25 dead pts. This shows the importance of recognition of a WL episode.
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