Potentially life-threatening aneurysms are being diagnosed at younger ages. “Initially it is small in size, and over a period of months and years, with the constant blood pressure pounding through it, it starts getting bigger, and at a certain point balloons (and) it can rupture.” Dr. Bharath Naravetla, an interventional neurologist with McLaren Macomb, is describing an aneurysm. More specifically, he’s discussing its silent growth and increasing risk of developing into a life-threatening hemorrhage. In...