Abstract

A Report on Spontaneous Intracerebral Haemorrhage

Severe spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage is a lifethreatening disorder that affects people all over the world and has a poor prognosis and few viable treatments. Some clinical and imaging characteristics help determine the aetiology, prognosis, and therapy options because cancer is such a complex disease. After an intracerebral haemorrhage, the location, mass effect, and intracranial pressure of the underlying haematoma, as well as subsequent cerebral oedema from perihaematomal neurotoxicity or inflammatory, and the consequences of prolonged neurological dysfunction, all have an impact on survival and recovery. Active management goals with a reasonable level of evidence support include avoiding early palliative care orders, well-coordinated specialist stroke unit care, targeted neurointensive and surgical procedures, early control of raised blood pressure, and speedy reversal of aberrant coagulation.


Author(s):

Fadi Alfayoumi
Department of Internal Medicine, Texas University Health Sciences Center, USA



Abstract | PDF

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