Compare the Difference Between Similar Terms

Difference Between Aneurysm and Hemorrhage

The key difference between aneurysm and hemorrhage is that an aneurysm is an anatomical abnormality where localized dilation occurs in the wall of a blood vessel, while hemorrhage is a pathological condition where blood escapes from the circulatory system. However, the rupture of an aneurysm can result in a massive hemorrhage.

Although aneurysm and hemorrhage are two blood-related medical conditions, there exists a distinct difference between them.

CONTENTS

1. Overview and Key Difference
2. What is Aneurysm
3. What is Hemorrhage
4. Aneurysm vs. Hemorrhage in Tabular Form
5. Summary – Aneurysm vs. Hemorrhage

What is an Aneurysm?

An aneurysm is a localized dilatation in the wall of a blood vessel. It will look like a blood-filled balloon attached to the blood vessel. Aneurysms can occur in any blood vessel of the body. Some examples of aneurysms are aneurysms of the circle of Willis, which is located in the base of the brain, and aortic aneurysms affecting the thoracic or abdominal aorta. Sometimes, aneurysms can also occur in the ventricles of the heart itself. This usually occurs due to the weakening of the ventricular wall by ischemic damage.

Aneurysms tend to increase in size with time. This may be accompanied by the weakening or thinning out of its wall. Therefore, aneurysms have an increased risk of rupture.  A ruptured aneurysm can lead to a fatal hemorrhage causing severe hypovolemic shock and death. Aneurysms occur due to hereditary weakness of the blood vessel wall or acquired weakness of the vessel wall by various causes such as degeneration, atherosclerosis, and infections. Aneurysms can also be a site for clot formation (thrombosis) and embolization (dislodge of the clot causing obstruction of blood flow in the distal organs.

Figure 1: Aneurysm

There are two types of aneurysms:

Radiological techniques such as ultrasonic scanning, contrast-enhanced CT scanning, etc., are used to diagnose aneurysms.  Selected growing aneurysms are treated by surgery. Currently, there are various interventional radiologic techniques where a catheter is passed through an artery up to the location of the aneurysm, and various procedures (clipping, coiling) are implemented to obstruct the cavity of the aneurysm. These techniques are especially useful for surgically inaccessible sites such as the base of the brain.

What is Hemorrhage?

Bleeding or hemorrhaging is defined as blood escaping from the circulatory system. The extent of the bleeding can range from a small capillary level bleed to a major life-threatening bleed. Bleeding can occur internally in the body, where blood leaks from a blood vessel inside the body, or externally, through a natural opening (e.g. mouth, urethra) or through an injury in the skin. A healthy person can tolerate a loss of 10–15% of the total blood volume without serious consequences. The stopping of bleeding is called hemostasis.

Figure 2: Subconjunctival Hemorrhage Eye

Blood loss can be categorized as below.

What is the Difference Between Aneurysm and Hemorrhage?

Bleeding or hemorrhaging is defined as blood escaping from the circulatory system, while an aneurysm can be defined as a localized dilatation in the wall of a blood vessel. This is the key difference between aneurysm and hemorrhage. While an aneurysm is an anatomical abnormality, hemorrhage is a pathological condition. Moreover, aneurysm is slowly progressive, whereas hemorrhage is rapidly progressive.

Another difference between aneurysm and hemorrhage is that aneurysm commonly causes thromboembolism, while hemorrhage causes hypovolemic shock. The body does not have a system to prevent the formation of aneurysms, but the body has a clotting pathway to control bleeding by sealing the defect in the vessel. Aneurysm can be observed without treatment if small, but hemorrhage should almost always be controlled.

The following table summarizes the difference between aneurysm and hemorrhage.

Summary – Aneurysm vs. Hemorrhage

The key difference between aneurysm and hemorrhage is that an aneurysm is an anatomical abnormality where localized dilation occurs in the wall of a blood vessel, while hemorrhage is a pathological condition where blood escapes from the circulatory system.

Image Courtesy:

1. “Cerebral aneurysm NIH” by en: National Institutes of Health  (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons
2. “Subconjunctival hemorrhage eye” by Daniel Flather – Own work. (CC BY-SA 3.0) via Wikimedia Commons