Hunt-Hess Grade Selection
Hunt-Hess Grade
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30-Day Mortality
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Surgery Timing
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Hunt-Hess Scale — Complete SAH Management Guide

The Hunt-Hess scale was published by William E. Hunt and Robert M. Hess in 1968 as a simple clinical grading system for aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). It classifies patients into five grades based on presenting neurological status, from asymptomatic aneurysm detection (Grade 0, sometimes added) through coma with decerebrate posturing (Grade V). The scale predicts surgical risk and 30-day mortality and guides the timing of aneurysm surgery or endovascular coiling.

GradeClinical Features30-Day MortalityWFNS Equivalent
IAsymptomatic or mild headache, slight neck stiffness~5%I
IIModerate-severe headache, meningismus, no neurological deficit except CN palsy~10%I–II
IIIDrowsiness, confusion, or mild focal deficit~25–30%II–III
IVStupor, moderate-severe hemiparesis, early decerebrate~45–60%IV
VDeep coma, decerebrate posturing, moribund~70–80%V

Aneurysm Securing — Surgery vs Endovascular Coiling

Following the ISAT trial (2002) and ISUIA data, endovascular coiling (endovascular embolisation) has largely replaced open surgical clipping as the first-line treatment for ruptured berry aneurysms where both are technically feasible. Key principles:

Vasospasm — Critical Complication of SAH

Delayed cerebral ischaemia (DCI) from vasospasm is the leading cause of death and disability in patients surviving the initial bleed. Vasospasm typically occurs between day 4 and day 14 (peak day 7–10), affecting the proximal cerebral arteries in response to subarachnoid blood products. Key management:

Hydrocephalus in SAH

Acute obstructive hydrocephalus occurs in 15–20% of SAH patients due to blood blocking CSF drainage pathways at the arachnoid granulations. It typically presents within 24–72 hours. Management: emergency external ventricular drain (EVD) if symptomatic (decreased LOC, upward gaze palsy). Chronic communicating hydrocephalus may develop weeks later, requiring ventriculoperitoneal shunting.

Related Calculators

⚠ Medical Disclaimer: Hunt-Hess grading requires trained clinical assessment by a neurosurgeon or neurologist. Management of subarachnoid haemorrhage requires urgent neurosurgical consultation, neuroimaging (CT, CT angiography), and multidisciplinary neurocritical care. This tool is for reference only and does not replace specialist evaluation.