Ms. Liu, who is in her early 50s, had a serious illness about 10 years ago, and after an examination, the doctor said it was a “brain hemorrhage” that required surgery. But after thinking about it, Ms. Liu finally decided to take medication. In the past ten years, she has not committed any more crimes and is looking forward to retirement. The sons and daughters are now well-off, and they are urging her to go to the hospital for a health check. But Ms. Liu is concerned about the money, and feel that their own bones are usually quite good certainly no problem, they have been dragging not to go. But one day in August this year, Ms. Liu was doing housework when she suddenly got a headache, followed by a head confusion and fell to the ground. The son took a look at the big deal and rushed to call 120, sending his mother to the local central hospital. The doctor gave Ms. Liu a head CT, and the result was “subarachnoid hemorrhage”! The doctor said, this kind of bleeding, in all probability, because of the head inside the aneurysm, very dangerous, like the head inside the “bomb”, the mortality rate is very high, need surgery to remove to cure. The doctor hurriedly arranged for Ms. Liu to do a CT angiography of her head, and sure enough, not only did she have an aneurysm in her head, but she had a whole three aneurysms! The local doctor took the film and shook his head while looking at it, and said to Ms. Liu’s son, “The mortality rate is already very high when others have only one aneurysm, but your mother has three aneurysms, which is very difficult to treat, and I’m afraid it’s very difficult to save her”. Ms. Liu’s son was so anxious that he took a taxi overnight and sent his mother to the hospital’s emergency room. After reviewing the patient’s data, Professor Tong Zhiyong of the Neurosurgery Cerebrovascular Ward concluded that all three aneurysms were at risk of rupture and should be operated on as soon as possible, and strive for simultaneous treatment, otherwise the probability of re-bleeding in the future would be greatly increased, and the economic burden of patient treatment would also increase. After thorough preoperative preparation, Professor Tong was able to clamp all three aneurysms in Ms. Liu’s head through microsurgery after more than four hours of effort. After the surgery, Ms. Liu gradually recovered, and after the review of cerebral angiography, it showed that all three aneurysms were “eliminated” without any residue, and she could be discharged from the hospital as scheduled, and after a period of recuperation, Ms. Liu could resume her normal life. After Ms. Liu’s son learned the news, he was overjoyed and a big stone in his heart finally fell to the ground. The professor introduced that the incidence of intracranial aneurysm is high, and a large sample of the normal population will have one intracranial aneurysm in about every 50 people. Once an aneurysm ruptures and bleeds, it can also cause serious symptoms and may even be life-threatening. If economic conditions allow, additional cerebrovascular examinations should be performed during routine medical checkups to enable early detection and treatment. Patients with ruptured aneurysms causing subarachnoid hemorrhage should undergo surgery as soon as possible, otherwise rebleeding may occur at any time and the mortality rate is extremely high. The cerebrovascular disease ward of the neurosurgery department of the hospital is one of the early specialized wards for cerebrovascular diseases in China, with a professional treatment team, first-class technology and advanced medical instruments, specializing in the treatment of various cerebrovascular diseases, especially complex cerebrovascular diseases.