Ruptured basilar tip aneurysm

Case contributed by Yaïr Glick
Diagnosis certain

Presentation

Acute severe headache.

Patient Data

Age: 45 years

Non-contrast CT head

  • extensive bilateral subarachnoid hemorrhage - perimesencephalic; in all the basal cisterns; in the narrowed third ventricle, Sylvian aqueduct, and fourth ventricle; in the premedullary cistern; in the Sylvian cisterns and fissures; in the interhemispheric fissure; and bifrontal

  • the temporal horns of the lateral ventricles are dilated - early sign of hydrocephalus

  • the cerebral and cerebellar sulci are effaced - suggestive of brain edema

CT angiogram

  • pedunculated aneurysm with a "nipple" at the basilar tip measuring 3 mm in diameter and 5.5 mm in length, deviating to the left P1

  • the intracranial arteries appear slightly narrowed, perhaps due to cerebral edema

  • the neck arteries are patent

mri

3-month follow-up MRI:

  • MRA: filling defect between basilar tip and left PCA, representing the embolization coils in the aneurysm

  • no evidence of new aneurysm

  • SWI: blood degradation products on the tentorial leaflets and in the basal cisterns, as well as small amount mainly in the biparietal sulci and bifrontal sulci around the vertex

  • two tiny foci of susceptibility artifact in the right cerebellar hemisphere and one in the left hemisphere

  • above the tentorium: several nonspecific abnormal white matter foci on the right, single one on the left - probably representing microangiopathy

  • no abnormal port-contrast enhancement

Case Discussion

An otherwise healthy woman complained of a severe headache that started that same morning. Blood pressure taken at the ED was 210 mmHg systolic. She was sent for a CT head-CTA neck and head arteries, for fear that a subarachnoid hemorrhage was the cause of her headache.

CT head showed extensive subarachnoid bleeding, as well as signs of brain edema and mild hydrocephalus, while the CTA revealed a small basilar tip aneurysm.

The aneurysm was successfully coiled, and the patient recovered promptly and uneventfully.

An MRI head done 3 months later showed only subtle hemosiderin deposits on SWI.

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