Treatment of unruptured cerebral aneurysms; a multi-center study at Japanese national hospitals.

The treatment and natural course of unruptured cerebral aneurysms were analyzed in 615 patients with 712 unruptured cerebral aneurysms registered from seven Japanese national hospitals and Zurich University hospital. For 209 aneurysms in 181 cases, the natural course of the aneurysms was observed without surgical treatment. During the follow-up period of 3,862 months (321.8 years), 11 of these aneurysms ruptured giving a rupture rate of 3.42%/year. Five of these 11 aneurysms were less than 10 mm in diameter. Seventeen aneurysms of these 209 untreated aneurysms had blebs. Seven of these 17 aneurysms ruptured yielding the high rupture rate of 28.3%/year. The likelihood of unruptured cerebral aneurysms to rupture was not exceedingly low even when the aneurysms were smaller than 10 mm. Since the risk of rupture and morbidity in relation to surgical treatment cannot be predicted by size alone, the morphology, especially the presence of blebs, should be considered when treating unruptured cerebral aneurysms. In 434 patients, 503 cerebral aneurysms were treated surgically either by craniotomy in 472 aneurysms or endovascular coil embolization in 31 aneurysms. Surgical outcome was influenced by the presence of concurrent diseases, patient age, size and location of the aneurysms. Complications after surgical treatment of 128 incidentally found aneurysms were reported in four cases; three cases of hemiparesis and one case showing disturbance of higher brain function, with a morbidity rate of 3.1%. These results suggest that surgical treatment may be acceptable in cases of incidentally found cerebral aneurysms, especially when blebs are present.