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Advanced Diagnosis and Treatment with Mayo Clinic Brain Aneurysm Experts
At Mayo Clinic, you’ll have a brain aneurysm care team with the experience and knowledge to provide an accurate diagnosis, a customized care plan, and the widest range of treatment options available.
Brain aneurysm expertise, on your side.
Our physicians and researchers have led many of the largest international studies into brain aneurysm diagnosis, management, and treatment techniques. You can have the peace of mind that you’re in the hands of a team of brain aneurysm experts.
Innovation at work.
We use advanced imaging including CT-scanning, MRI, computerized tomography angiography, magnetic resonance angiography, cerebral arteriography, cerebrospinal fluid examination and other tests to diagnose and treat brain aneurysm.
Our surgeons are skilled in innovative treatment options including endovascular coiling, flow diverters and other endovascular techniques, surgical clipping, and pipeline embolism approaches. Clinical trials may be available to you. With state-of-the-art research, laboratory, and advanced imaging techniques, Mayo Clinic experts are constantly seeking new medical knowledge and innovations.
A whole team of experts.
With Mayo Clinic's team approach, we can often provide you with a diagnosis and treatment plan within a few days. Your care team will include Mayo Clinic neurologists, neurosurgeons, neuroradiologists and more – all working together for you.
Nationally recognized.
Mayo Clinic is recognized nationally for neurology and neurosurgery in Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, is ranked among the Best Hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery in the U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals rankings.
When it's time to find answers, you know where to go.
Contact us to request an appointment.
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Why Choose Mayo Clinic for Neurovascular Care
Getting the diagnosis right the first time is critical. It offers the patient immediate therapy. It offers closure. Most vascular diseases are very unique to the patient. Being able to treat each patient individually is, I think, exceedingly important. We have a multidisciplinary evaluation where we look at the whole patient and look at every single thing that could possibly happen, and then discuss what is in the patient's best interests. The most common things that we see, are strokes, aneurysms of the brain are more common than we think. Then we deal with more rare type things, blood vessel abnormalities of the brain. The Mayo model of care really lends itself to the treatment of rare and complicated disease. Brain imaging and arterial imaging is extremely important in the field of neurovascular disease. And here at Mayo, we're so fortunate to have imaging options available at the highest possible quality.
We now see inside the body in a way we never did with all sorts of other advances in post-processing and analysis of the images, we can make much more specific diagnoses. There have been many, many innovations. The main change over the past 30 years has been the advances in endovascular techniques. Many of these problems can be effectively dealt with by going through the blood vessels, um, and without the need to expose the brain or the spinal cord. I enjoy working with neurosurgery, neuroradiology, and collaborating on these patients that have difficult situations, and we want to make their lives better. It's important to try as much as possible to treat the patient as one of our family members. I think that if we're able to do that, you are already a very good doctor because you always worry and you don't take anything for granted.
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