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A cerebral aneurysm can occur anywhere in the
brain. Aneurysms can have several shapes. The saccular aneurysm,
once called a berry aneurysm, resembles a piece of fruit dangling
from a branch. Saccular aneurysms are usually found at a branch in
the blood vessel where they balloon out by a thin neck. Saccular
cerebral aneurysms most often occur at the branch points of large
arteries at the base of the brain. Aneurysms may also take the form
of a bulge in one wall of the artery--a lateral aneurysm--or a
widening of the entire artery--a fusiform aneurysm.
The greatest danger of aneurysms is rupture.
Approximately 50-75% of stricken people survive an aneurysmal
rupture. A ruptured aneurysm spills blood into the brain or into the
fluid-filled area that surrounds the brain tissue. Bleeding into
this area, called the subarachnoid space, is referred to as
subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). About 25,000 people suffer a SAH each
year. It is estimated that people with unruptured aneurysm have an
annual 1-2% risk of hemorrhage. Under age 40, more men experience
SAH. After age 40, more women than men are affected.
Most people who have suffered a SAH from a
ruptured aneurysm did not know that the aneurysm even existed. Based
on autopsy studies, medical researchers estimate that 1-5% of the
population has some type of cerebral aneurysm. Aneurysms rarely
occur in the very young or the very old; about 60% of aneurysms are
diagnosed in people between ages 40 and 65.
Some aneurysms may have a genetic link and run in
families. The genetic link has not been completely proven and a
pattern of inheritance has not been determined. Some studies seem to
show that first-degree relatives of people who suffered aneurysmal
SAH are more likely to have aneurysms themselves. These studies
reported that such immediate family members were four times more
likely to have aneurysms than the general population. Other studies
do not confirm these findings. Better evidence links aneurysms to
certain rare diseases of the connective tissue. These diseases
include Marfan syndrome, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, Ehlers-Danlos
syndrome, and fibromuscular dysplasia. Polycystic kidney disease is
also associated with cerebral aneurysms.
These diseases are also associated with an
increased risk of aneurysmal rupture. Certain other conditions raise
the risk of rupture, too. Most aneurysms that rupture are a half-inch
or larger in diameter. Size is not the only factor, however, because
smaller aneurysms also rupture. Cigarette smoking, excessive alcohol
consumption, and recreational drug use (for example, use of cocaine)
have been linked with an increased risk. The role, if any, of high
blood pressure has not been determined. Some studies have implicated
high blood pressure in aneurysm formation and rupture, but people
with normal blood pressure also experience aneurysms and SAHs. High
blood pressure may be a risk factor but not the most important one.
Pregnancy, labor, and delivery also seem to increase the possibility
that an aneurysm might rupture, but not all doctors agree. Physical
exertion and use of oral contraceptives are not suspected causes for
aneurysmal rupture. |