Publication | Closed Access
Histopathology of Cerebral Aneurysms
209
Citations
19
References
1963
Year
Vascular DiseaseVascular MalformationNonmycotic OriginAnatomyCongenital Heart AnomalyNeurovascular DiseaseSaccular Cerebral AneurysmsVascular SurgeryExtracranial ComplicationsBrain InjuryNeurologyNeuropathologyHistopathologyVascular BiologyCerebral Blood FlowDevelopmental AnomalyCerebral AneurysmsDevelopmental BiologyInterventional NeuroradiologyNeuroanatomyMedicine
Saccular cerebral aneurysms of nonmycotic origin are of considerable importance in cerebrovascular pathology and neurosurgery, but their etiology has remained a controversial subject for many years. Hassler<sup>1</sup>contends that 2 fundamentally. opposed views emerge from the many theories propounded. One view assumes that a major congenital or developmental factor is responsible and the other considers that aneurysms are the result of postnatal changes in the arterial wall. Naturally, the combination of acquired and congenital factors is also possible, and in recent years Carmichael,<sup>2,3</sup>Walker and Allègre,<sup>4,5</sup>and Crawford<sup>6</sup>have supported this view. However, the findings of Glynn<sup>7</sup>and Stehbens<sup>8-20</sup>argue against the "congenital theory," though further evidence is necessary. In this histological study of cerebral aneurysms, emphasis has been placed on early aneurysmal changes, and the investigation was aimed at providing information on the following: 1. Earliest demonstrable histological evidence of aneurysms and the
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