Is cerebral hemorrhage how to return a responsibility? What’s the difference between it and cerebral infarction? Why so much harm?

Cerebral hemorrhage, also known as “hemorrhagic stroke”, commonly known as “cerebral hemorrhage”, is the second largest type of cerebrovascular disease. Cerebral hemorrhage accounts for about 20% of all stroke, but nearly 60% of the patients who die each year due to cerebrovascular diseases are caused by cerebral hemorrhage. So, how is cerebral haemorrhage to return a responsibility? What’s the difference between it and cerebral infarction? Why so much harm? How can we prevent it?

Cerebral hemorrhage is caused by the rupture of cerebral blood vessels. The blood that should flow in the blood vessels enters the brain tissue, causing severe oppression to the brain and releasing harmful substances. Different from cerebral infarction, cerebral infarction is caused by cerebral vascular occlusion, after which the brain lacks energy and oxygen and quickly becomes necrotic.

So, figuratively speaking, a cerebral hemorrhage is a rupture of a blood vessel in which brain cells are “compressed to death” or “poisoned to death”; A cerebral infarction is a blockage of blood vessels that causes brain cells to starve to death due to ischemia.

Stroke onset is fierce and rapid, but not without symptoms, in a few minutes to a few days before the onset of a variety of symptoms, so, when family members appear the following conditions, please be sure to pay attention:

  1. Sensory disorders: numbness of lips, face and tongue, tinnitus and hearing loss;
  2. Dyskinesia: physical weakness or immobility;

3, visual impairment: sudden blurred vision, or vision decline, or double vision;

  1. Speech disorder: difficulty in expressing or understanding words;
  2. Dizziness: Dizziness, unsteady gait or falling off balance
  3. Headache: Usually a sudden and severe headache, or a different headache;
  4. Abnormal personality and behavior: sudden abnormal personality, behavior and intelligence.

So how do you prevent stroke?

It is necessary to maintain a healthy lifestyle, such as quitting smoking, restricting alcohol, eating a light diet, keeping a steady mood, drinking enough water every day, moderate physical activity, paying attention to climate change, and regular medical examinations. Risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, constipation of the elderly, hyperlipidemia and obesity should be actively treated. Stroke prevention begins at an early age because the pathologic changes in atherosclerosis begin in childhood.