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Does treatment modality of intracranial ruptured aneurysms influence the incidence of cerebral vasospasm and clinical outcome?

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Does treatment modality of intracranial ruptured aneurysms influence the incidence of cerebral vasospasm and clinical outcome?

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GROUND: Cerebral vasospasm is the most common cause of morbidity and mortality after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). This study is designed to determine whether the incidence of symptomatic vasospasm and the overall clinical outcome differ between patients treated with surgical clipping compared with endovascular obliteration of aneurysms. METHODS: In this prospective study, 98 patients with aneurysmal SAH were treated. Seventy-two patients underwent surgery and clipping and 26 had coil embolization. The incidence of symptomatic vasospasm, permanent neurologic deficit due to vasospasm and clinical outcome were analyzed. Patients with better clinical and radiological grades (World Federation of Neurological Surgeons grades I-III and Fisher grades I-III) were analyzed separately. RESULTS: Symptomatic vasospasm occurred in 22% of the patients; 25% in the surgical group and 15% in the endovascular group. Nine percent of the patients in the surgical group and 7% in the endovascula

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