Indications for surgical treatment of putaminal hemorrhage

Abstract
✓ Serial computerized tomography (CT) scans were correlated with a precise time-course analysis of the neurological condition of 180 patients with hypertensive putaminal hemorrhage. All patients entered the study within 3 hours of the ictus. In this series, 111 patients were treated conservatively and 69 surgically. The neurological condition of each patient was measured by means of a newly proposed grading system for intracerebral hemorrhage-intracranial hemorrhage (ICH grade) which is a modification of the Glasgow Coma Scale. Serial CT scans revealed that most hemorrhages were completed within 6 hours after ictus. Based on the ICH grade at 6 hours postictus, a clinical classification of the severity of putaminal hemorrhage was defined: fulminant, rapidly progressive, slowly progressive, and nonprogressive. According to this classification, precise time courses of the ICH grade were compared between the conservative and surgical treatment groups in a 7-day postictal period. Activities of daily living at 6 months after ictus were also compared. Surgical treatment for a rapidly progressive hemorrhage appears to be beneficial if undertaken in patients under 65 years of age. Surgery in a slowly progressive hemorrhage should be considered only in a small number of patients who deteriorate neurologically with conservative treatment. In this series of patients, surgical treatment of fulminant and nonprogressive hemorrhage was not likely to improve the quality of life or functional recovery. Regardless of treatment modality, CT provided evidence that patients with anterior capsular hemorrhage (16% in this series) showed good recovery of motor and speech function.