Welcome to the OutUK series looking at gay men and their health brought to you in association with the NHS website.
Each week we'll tackle a different topic in our A to Z of Gay Health. We'll have features and advice on everything from relationships, sexual health, mental and physical conditions and how to stay fit. You can follow any of links provided below for more information direct from the NHS website, or see this week's feature L: Laxatives.

Treatment

You'll usually be transferred to a specialist neurosciences unit if a subarachnoid haemorrhage is suspected.

These units have a range of equipment and treatments to support many of the body's vital functions, such as breathing, blood pressure and circulation.

If your condition is severe, you may be transferred to an intensive care unit (ICU).

Nimodipine

One of the main complications of a subarachnoid haemorrhage is secondary cerebral ischaemia.

This is where the supply of blood to the brain becomes dangerously reduced, disrupting the normal functions of the brain, causing brain damage.

You'll usually be given a medicine called nimodipine to reduce the chances of this happening.

This is normally taken for 3 weeks, until the risk of secondary cerebral ischaemia has passed.

Side effects of nimodipine are uncommon but can include:

  • flushing
  • feeling sick
  • increased heart rate
  • headaches
  • a rash

Pain relief

Medicine can be effective in relieving the severe headache pain associated with a subarachnoid haemorrhage.

Commonly used pain-relieving medicines include morphine and a combination of codeine and paracetamol.

Other medicines

Other medicines that may be used to treat a subarachnoid haemorrhage include:

  • anticonvulsants, such as phenytoin - which can help prevent seizures (fits)
  • antiemetics, such as promethazine - which can help stop you feeling sick and vomiting

Surgery and procedures

If scans show that the subarachnoid haemorrhage was caused by a brain aneurysm, a procedure to repair the affected blood vessel and prevent the aneurysm from bursting again may be recommended.

This can be carried out using one of 2 main techniques. The type of procedure used will depend on your health and the aneurysm's position. Both are carried out under general anaesthetic, meaning you'll be asleep throughout the operation.

Coiling

A thin tube called a catheter is inserted into an artery in your leg or groin.

The tube is guided through the network of blood vessels into your head and into the aneurysm.

Tiny platinum coils are then passed through the tube and into the aneurysm. Once the aneurysm is full of coils, blood cannot enter it.

This means the aneurysm is sealed off from the main artery, preventing it growing or rupturing again.

Clipping

A cut is made in your scalp (or sometimes just above your eyebrow) and a small flap of bone is removed so the surgeon can access your brain. This type of operation is known as a craniotomy.

When the aneurysm is located, a tiny metal clip is fitted around the base of the aneurysm to seal it shut. After the bone flap has been replaced, the scalp is stitched together.

Over time, the blood vessel lining will heal along where the clip is placed, permanently sealing the aneurysm and preventing it growing or rupturing again.

Coiling versus clipping

Whether clipping or coiling is used depends on things such as the size, location and shape of the aneurysm.

Coiling is often the preferred technique because it has a lower risk of short-term complications such as seizures than clipping, although the long-term benefits over clipping are uncertain.

People who have the coiling procedure usually leave hospital sooner than people who have the clipping procedure, and the overall recovery time can be shorter.

But when these types of surgery are carried out as an emergency procedure, your recovery time and hospital stay depend more on the rupture's severity than the type of surgery used.

Sometimes surgery may not be advisable because it's considered too risky. This is called conservative treatment or management.

Whichever treatment you have, you will need to be closely monitored for some time to avoid complications.

OutUK's A to Z of Gay Health continues and you can read this week's feature L: Laxatives. We have covered many subjects in this series and you can catch up with all of our Previous A to Z Features.

If you want to find out more about this particular topic you can visit the Original article on the NHS website. If you are worried by any aspect of your health make sure you go and see your doctor or book an appointment at your local clinic.

Photos: LightFieldStudios and one of VladOrlov, Stockcube, darak77, ajr_images or rawpixel.com.

 

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