Signs before awakening from coma with cerebral hemorrhage include stable vital signs, gradual improvement in all relevant examinations, gradual increase in Glasgow score, and voluntary movement of the patient’s limbs or even movement on command.
1. Stable vital signs: the patient’s vital signs such as blood pressure, heart rate, respiration and body temperature tend to be stable without obvious fluctuations.
2. Gradual improvement in all relevant examinations: the patient’s blood routine, liver and kidney function, coagulation function, electrolytes and other relevant laboratory tests, as well as cranial CT and other relevant imaging tests suggest that the patient’s condition is gradually improving, intracranial hemorrhage is gradually absorbed, and there is no re-bleeding.
3. Glasgow score is gradually rising: Glasgow Coma Score is an important scoring standard for assessing the patient’s state of consciousness, and there are three aspects in the assessment: eye-opening response, language response and limb movement, and the total of scores of the three aspects is the coma index, and the rise of the score can suggest that the patient’s state of consciousness has improved.
4. The patient’s limbs have autonomous activities, and can even move on command: this is the most intuitive indication that the patient may wake up.
Cerebral hemorrhage coma patients with the above signs may wake up, the doctor should judge according to the actual situation of the patient.