https://www.selleckchem.com/products/i-bet151-gsk1210151a.html Coronavirus disease has overwhelmed the healthcare systems around the globe at an unprecedented level. The same was observed in the Romanian medical system. Interventional cardiology units have experienced a dramatic reduction in elective and urgent interventional procedures. The present report highlights the total number of coronary interventions, peripheral interventions, and interventions for structural heart diseases that were performed in 2020 in Romania in comparison to 2019.BackgroundUnruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) can be presented with various symptoms, including atypical headaches and cranial nerve deficits. Vertigo is often referred in the literature as a coexisting symptom. Our aim was to investigate the importance of vertigo in the UIA symptomatology and present a possible explanation for its existence. MethodsWe conducted a retrospective observational multicenter study concerning patients with surgically treated intracranial aneurysms. During a period of 10 years, 1 085 patients with cerebral aneurysms underwent surgery. There were 812 patients with ruptured intracranial aneurysms (RIA) and 273 with UIA. The medical records for each of the 273 patients were analyzed. Results After the implementation of exclusion criteria, 89 (32.6%) of UIA patients were selected in the study, from which 71 (79.8%) were females and 18 (20.2%) males. The mean age was 56.9 (± 12.876) years old. Vertigo existed in 72 (80.9%), headache in 41 (46.1%) and visual symptoms in 21 (23.6%) patients. No significant correlation (p >0.05) was demonstrated between gender, age or aneurysm location in correlation with vertigo, headache or visual symptoms, apart from a negative significant correlation between age and vertigo (p=0.031). ConclusionVertigo is an alarming symptom that could indicate the existence of an UIA. The pathophysiological mechanism could be explained by the formation of an aneurysmal vortex that p