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Aneurysm
Etiology

The berry aneurysm is a small, saclike structure at the branchpoints of arteries with a wall which does not contain a media or internal elastic lamina and therefore can easily rupture during periods of hypertension or stress.
Most commonly ruptures when the patient is 40-60 yrs.
May also rupture intracerebrally.
Pathogenesis

Aneurysms are thought to be due to congenital absence of the media and internal elastic lamina with ballooning as the blood pulsates through the vessels over the years.
Ruptures when an area becomes thinned and there is a period of hypertension or straining.,
Epidemiology

Berry aneurysms are found incidentally at autopsy 1-2% of the time. Vascular malformations are much less common.
Aneurysms occur on the anterior Circle of Willis 80% of the time. Anterior communicating artery and middle cerebral artery at the trifurcation are the most comman places for one to arise.
General Gross Description

Subarachnoid hemorrhage is blood in the leptomeninges usually at the base of the brain and most often due to rupture of a berry aneurysm, vascular malformation, or trauma.
•Examples:
Cerebral Aneurysm
General Microscopic Description

Microscopically in subarachnoid hemorrhage there are red and white blood cells in the leptomeninges.
After three days macrophages can be seen phagocytosing degenerating blood cells.
•Examples:
Normal vessel wall for comparison with Aneurysm Normal vessel wall for comparison with Aneurysm Aneurysm Aneurysm
References

Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 1311-1313.

For Most Current Information Search Medline at National Library of Medicine
This link will directly take you to the relevant new literature
Aneurysm
Synopsis by: M.L. Grunnet M.D. (TX2000M32400)[405]
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