Can you recover from cerebral hemorrhage hemiplegia?

Hemiplegia caused by cerebral hemorrhage is a symptom caused by the rupture of blood vessels inside the brain parenchyma and the blood breaking into the inner brain parenchyma to form a hematoma, which compresses the brain cells and causes them to die. Whether a patient can recover from cerebral hemorrhage hemiplegia is related to the site of bleeding, the amount of bleeding, and rehabilitation treatment. If the patient’s intracerebral hematoma is small and the site of hemorrhage is not in the motor area or in an important area, such as the caudate nucleus where no sensory and motor nerve fibers pass through, the symptoms of hemiplegia caused by hemorrhage here are mild, and the patient will gradually recover after the edema and hematoma in the brain are gradually absorbed, and the hemiplegia can be recovered. If the cerebral hemorrhage is located in important areas such as the internal capsule and basal ganglia area, the hemorrhage volume is larger, resulting in a large number and volume of brain cell death, and the edema involving brain cells is more extensive, after the hematoma is absorbed, these patients can develop symptoms of neurological deficits, i.e., hemiparesis, sensory impairment, aphasia, etc. Patients with this condition generally cannot recover completely. Patients with cerebral hemorrhage should undergo rehabilitation as early as their condition allows. Generally, the best period for rehabilitation is within 3 months after cerebral hemorrhage. Bedside rehabilitation therapy at this stage or going to the rehabilitation department for professional rehabilitation training such as bed-raising, standing and walking can help the recovery of limb function, thus promoting early recovery of cerebral hemorrhage hemiplegic patients.