Can blindness from right occipital lobe infarction be cured?

Blindness from right occipital lobe infarction is usually difficult to cure. Brain cells, unlike skin epithelial cells or bone cells which are renewable cells, will cause irreversible damage after damage and cannot be regenerated, and their functions are difficult to recover. Under normal physiological structure, the human occipital lobe has an optic radiation and a visual center. Visual information and stimuli generated from the outside world are transmitted to the optic nerve through the eyeballs, and through the optic tract and optic radiation, they reach the visual center in the occipital lobe of the brain, and then integrate to produce vision. Damage or compression of any of the structures in the pathway will result in different degrees of visual field defects or even blindness. If the right occipital lobe infarct is small and treatment is timely, it is likely that some or all of the visual function can be restored without causing blindness. However, if the infarct is large or not treated in time, and symptoms of blindness have already appeared, it is often difficult for the patient to regain vision, and permanent blindness may result. Time is brain, so once you find the symptoms of cerebral infarction, you should promptly call 120 to send to the hospital, and ask the professional doctors to actively diagnose and treat the symptoms without delaying the treatment.