The question of whether unruptured intracranial vertebral artery dissections should be treated surgically or nonsurgically still remains unresolved. In this study, six consecutive patients with intracranial vertebral artery dissection presenting with brain-stem ischemia without subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) were treated non-surgically with control of blood pressure and bed rest, and five received follow-up review with serial angiography. No further progression of dissection or associated SAH occurred in any of the cases, and all patients returned to their previous lifestyles. In the serial angiograms in five patients, the findings continued to change during the first few months after onset. Four cases ultimately showed "angiographic cure," while fusiform aneurysmal dilatation of the affected vessel persisted in one case. In one patient, arterial dissection was visualized on the second angiogram despite negative initial angiographic findings. These results indicate that intracranial vertebral artery dissection presenting without SAH can be treated nonsurgically, with careful angiographic follow-up monitoring. Persistent aneurysmal dilatation as a sequela of arterial dissection seemed to form a subgroup of fusiform aneurysms of the posterior circulation. These aneurysms may be prone to late bleeding and may require surgical treatment.
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