Most aneurysms within the brain are congenital: there is a risk that they may burst, causing a *subarachnoid haemorrhage. Berry aneurysms are small saccular aneurysms most commonly occurring in the branches of the *circle of Willis. Usually associated with congenital weakness of the vessels, these aneurysms are a cause of fatal intracranial haemorrhage in young adults. Charcot–Bouchard aneurysms are small aneurysms found on tiny arteries within the brain of elderly and hypertensive subjects. These aneurysms may rupture, causing cerebral haemorrhage. Options for treatment of cerebral aneurysms include surgical clipping of the aneurysm and placing metallic coils within the aneurysm to establish a clot within it (endovascular *coiling).
In a pseudoaneurysm (or false aneurysm) the swelling of the artery is contained by clotted blood rather than the wall of the artery. —aneurysmal adj.... aneurysm