Brain hemorrhage means bleeding into the brain due to rupture of one of the vessels in the brain. When bleeding occurs, the brain inside the skull, which is an inflexible structure, remains under the pressure created by the blood filling it, is crushed, and as a result, extremely serious life-threatening conditions such as coma occur.
Types of Brain Hemorrhages
Intracerebral (into the brain tissue)
Subarachnoidal (between the meninges)
Epidural (between the skull and the dura, the outermost membrane of the brain) )
Subdural (between dura and brain)
Intra-Cerebral Hemorrhages
Brain hemorrhage means bleeding into the brain due to rupture of one of the vessels in the brain. When bleeding occurs, the brain inside the skull, which is an inflexible structure, remains under the pressure created by the blood filling it, is crushed, and as a result, extremely serious life-threatening conditions such as coma occur.
Causes of Brain Bleeding
The most common type of brain hemorrhage may occur due to abnormalities related to the vascular structure, i.e. due to reasons such as high blood pressure or trauma.
Cerebral hemorrhages due to trauma are quite common. It occurs as a result of a blow to the skull and causes bleeding.
There are also hemorrhages due to brain vessel abnormalities. Other types of hemorrhages are hemorrhages within the brain tissue itself and occur as a result of a structural disorder of the brain or a tumor.
Symptoms of Brain Bleeding
Nausea
Vomiting
Headache
Drowsiness or inability to move any part,
Disturbance in consciousness
Propensity to sleep, facial distortion
It may show symptoms such as impaired speech.
Brain Hemorrhage Treatment
Brain hemorrhage absolutely requires doctor control. Depending on the development of the coma state, its treatment varies. Patients who do not develop coma are more likely to return to life with surgical intervention.
