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Brain Hemorrhage

Stop bleeding, protect brain function

A brain hemorrhage is bleeding within or around the brain caused by ruptured blood vessels. This bleeding increases intracranial pressure, damages surrounding brain tissue, and interrupts normal blood supply. Common causes include head trauma, uncontrolled high blood pressure, aneurysm rupture, or vascular malformations. Symptoms often develop suddenly, such as a severe headache, weakness, vision problems, confusion, or seizures. Diagnosis requires urgent imaging, usually CT or MRI. Treatment may involve surgery, medications, or interventional procedures to stop bleeding and relieve pressure. Immediate medical attention is vital to reduce brain injury, minimize disability, and improve chances of survival and recovery.

Risk Factor and Causes

Brain hemorrhage is commonly triggered by hypertension, trauma, aneurysm rupture, or vascular malformations. These risk factors and causes weaken vessels, leading to bleeding, brain tissue damage, disability, or death.

Benefits and Symptoms

Reduced Disability

Early treatment prevents further brain damage, helping patients maintain independence and reduce long-term neurological complications.

Timely care stabilizes the patient, controls bleeding, and significantly improves survival chances after a brain hemorrhage.

Immediate intervention enhances rehabilitation potential, supporting quicker recovery of motor skills, speech, and cognitive functions.

Sudden, intense headache often described as the worst ever may signal bleeding inside the brain.

Rapid weakness, paralysis, or numbness on one side of the body suggests intracranial bleeding impairing brain function.

Blurred vision, double vision, slurred speech, or confusion may develop due to hemorrhage affecting critical brain areas.