Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Last published:Aug 05, 2021
Subarachnoid hemorrhage is the medical name for a certain type of bleeding in your head, in the space between your brain and your skull.
Subarachnoid hemorrhage is a medical emergency and can be fatal. But timely treatment saves lives. So if you spot the signs in yourself or someone else, get help fast.
What is subarachnoid hemorrhage?
Subarachnoid hemorrhage is a rare type of stroke. It happens when there is bleeding in the subarachnoid space - the area in between the inside of your skull and the surface of your brain.
The hemorrhage (bleeding) often happens when an aneurysm bursts. An aneurysm is a bulge in a blood vessel. It happens when a weak place in the blood-vessel wall stretches and fills with blood.
It’s not really clear why aneurysms form in some people’s heads. But we do know that some things make them more likely, including:
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having close relatives with this type of problem
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smoking
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being older
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having high blood pressure
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being black
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being a woman
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drinking a lot of alcohol over many years
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using cocaine, and
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having certain medical conditions, including Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and polycystic kidney disease.
This might look like a long list, but subarachnoid hemorrhage is not common. But it is vital to act fast if you recognize the signs, as it’s often fatal when not treated quickly.
What are the symptoms?
The main symptom of subarachnoid hemorrhage is a sudden, very severe headache. Many people describe it as the worst headache of their life. It is sometimes called a “thunderclap” headache.
Other symptoms include:
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nausea
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vomiting, and
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extreme sensitivity to light (called photophobia), which can cause pain and discomfort in the eyes.
If you or someone else has symptoms that suggest subarachnoid hemorrhage, call an ambulance right away.
People with suspected subarachnoid hemorrhage should receive emergency treatment in the hospital. Some people who have subarachnoid hemorrhage are awake and can answer questions from the medical team. But some people arrive at the hospital unconscious.
The doctor will want to do some tests, including a CT scan to check for bleeding in the brain, and blood tests.
He or she might also want to do a test called a lumbar puncture. It involves taking fluid from your spine with a needle, to be tested for blood. This helps to tell for certain whether there is bleeding in your head.
What treatments are available?
The main treatment for subarachnoid hemorrhage is surgery to seal the aneurysm so that it can’t bleed any more.
But before that can happen the medical team will need to do some more tests and to make you as stable and comfortable as they can before operating.
For example, you might need:
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help to breathe properly, using a ventilator (a machine that helps you breathe when your lungs are struggling)
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medication to ease pain while you are waiting for surgery
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medications to prevent seizures, which can happen after subarachnoid hemorrhage, and which can cause more bleeding if not prevented
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medication to prevent coughing. Any jolting or jerking movement, such as coughing, could cause more bleeding
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medication to soften your stools (feces). This is so you won’t need to strain when you go to the bathroom. Straining could cause more bleeding.
You might also need drugs to help your blood to flow properly. This can involve a balance between two problems that can happen in people with subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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If you have coagulopathy, this means that your blood doesn’t clot easily enough, so that it’s too “thin”, and you bleed too easily, while
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vasospasm means that your blood vessels constrict (tighten up and get too narrow) so that your blood doesn’t flow freely enough around your body.
Surgery to repair the aneurysm
If you have surgery for subarachnoid hemorrhage it will usually be done within 72 hours (three days) of you being admitted to the hospital.
There are two types of surgery that can repair a burst aneurysm in your head.
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With surgical clipping a clip is placed across the neck of the aneurysm so that no more blood can enter it. To do this, the surgeon needs to cut away a small piece of your skull. This is called a craniotomy. Once the aneurysm is repaired the piece of skull is replaced and your scalp is stitched up.
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With coil embolization (or just “coiling”) a thin tube called a catheter is inserted into an artery in your groin or leg and up through your blood vessels to where the aneurysm is. Tiny coils made of a metal called titanium are then passed along the coil and into the aneurysm. These coils block up the aneurysm.
It’s not really clear whether one of these techniques is better than the other at sealing up aneurysms and stopping them bleeding again.
Some research suggests that coiling works better at preventing bleeding from happening again in the short term, but that in some people the operation needs to be repeated.
If you have coiling you also need to have checkups from time to time to see if the coils are still doing their job. With clipping, you don’t need checkups.
Coiling might be a better option in people who are not well enough to have a craniotomy.
What will happen?
Treatments for subarachnoid hemorrhage have improved a lot in recent years, but the condition is still fatal in many people.
And many people who survive have complications, which can be permanent. Heart and lung problems are the most common long-term complications.
Younger people and those who are conscious (awake) after a hemorrhage tend to have the best chance of a good recovery. Most people who are in a coma after a hemorrhage will not survive.
Six months after treatment for subarachnoid hemorrhage, 75 in 100 people who were conscious before treatment are still alive.
But up to half of those who survive will have some kind of disability. This can include problems with:
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memory and thinking clearly
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depression
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quality of life, and
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emotional health.
After treatment, you might need to have a test called an angiography from time to time. This test checks for any problems in your blood vessels.
This test is usually done every 6 to 12 months until your doctor decides it’s not needed any more.
More help
Some charities and support groups offer help and information to people who have had a subarachnoid hemorrhage and their loved ones.
Your treatment team might be able to help you find support where you live. Or you could search online.
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