Abstract
Background/Objectives: Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) involves a sudden onset of a perfusion-pressure injury from the initial insult combined with a secondary injury phase produced by delayed cerebral ischemia, cerebrospinal fluid circulation disturbances, and generalized instability of the patient's physiological state. The situation may be further complicated when there has been rupture of the aneurysm at the site of the carotid-posterior communicating (PCom) artery junction that occurs in conjunction with a fetal configuration of the posterior cerebral artery (fPCA), thereby making definitive treatment dependent on preserving the critical nature of the branches of the posterior circulation since the aneurysm's neck plane coincides with the dominant posterior circulation conduit. Case Presentation: A 65-year-old female patient who was obese (Grade III BMI = 42), had chronic bronchial asthma, and arterial hypertension experienced a "thunderclap" type of headache in the right retro-orbital area followed by a syncopal episode and developed acute confusion with agitation. Upon admission to the hospital, her Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) was 13, her FOUR score was 15, her Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) score was 12/30, her Hunt-Hess grade was 3, WFNS grade 2, and Fisher grade 4 SAH with intraventricular extension. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and three-dimensional rotational angiography revealed a posteriorly directed right carotid communicating aneurysm that had a relatively compact neck (approximately 2.5 mm) and sac size of approximately 7.7 × 6.6 mm, with the fPCA originating at the neck plane. Microsurgical treatment was performed with junction-preserving reconstruction with skull base refinement, temporary occlusion of the internal carotid artery for a few minutes, placement of clips reconstructing the carotid-PCom interface, and micro-Doppler verification of patent vessel. Postoperatively, the blood pressure was kept within the range of 110-130 mmHg with nimodipine and closely monitored. The neurological recovery was sequential (GCS of 15 by POD 2; MoCA of 22 by POD 5). By POD 5 CT scan, the clip remained positioned in a stable fashion without evidence of infarct, hemorrhage, or hydrocephalus; at three months she was neurologically intact (mRS 0; Barthel 100; MoCA 28/30), and CTA confirmed persistent exclusion of the aneurysm and preservation of fPCA flow. Conclusions: In cases where the ruptured aneurysm is located at the carotid communicating junction with the PCom artery in a configuration of the posterior cerebral artery that is described as fetal, clip treatment should be viewed as a form of branch-preserving junction reconstruction of the carotid-PCom junction supported by adherence to controlled postoperative physiology and close ppostoperativesurveillance.