Treatment focuses on stabilizing your condition, treating an aneurysm if you have one, and preventing complications.
Your provider checks your breathing, blood pressure, and blood flow.
If your bleeding is caused by a ruptured brain aneurysm, your provider might recommend:
- Surgery. The surgeon makes an incision in the scalp and locates the brain aneurysm. A metal clip is placed on the aneurysm to stop the blood flow to it.
- Endovascular embolization. The surgeon inserts a catheter into an artery and threads it to your brain. Detachable platinum coils are guided through the catheter and placed in the aneurysm. The coils fill the aneurysm, reducing blood flow into the aneurysm sac and causing the blood to clot. Different types of coils have been developed to treat various aneurysms.
- Other endovascular treatments. Certain aneurysms can be treated with endovascular embolization that uses newer technology such as stent-assisted or balloon-assisted coiling or devices that divert blood flow.
Preventing complications is important because you can bleed again, have poor blood flow to the brain, have low salts such as sodium in your blood, develop too much fluid on the brain, or have high or low blood sugar. One medication, nimodipine (Nymalize) has been shown to decrease circulation problems to the brain after a subarachnoid hemorrhage.
A common complication after an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage is delayed spasm of the blood vessels in the brain. This can cause stroke if it reduces the blood flow below a certain level. When this complication occurs, strokes may be avoided by raising the blood pressure with intravenous medications or increasing the width of the blood vessels in the brain with medications.
Another common complication is hydrocephalus which is an accumulation of fluid in brain spaces. This problem can be treated with drains inserted in the head (ventriculostomy catheter) or in the lower back (lumbar drains).
Sometimes, procedures need to be repeated. You'll have regular follow-up appointments with your provider to watch for any changes. You may also need physical, occupational and speech therapy.