Brain bridge infarcts can be life-threatening and dangerous. The cerebral bridge is an integral part of the brainstem, connecting dorsally to the cerebellum, and the ventral portion acts as the floor of the fourth ventricle and contains several cerebral nerve nuclei; therefore, the risk of cerebral bridge infarction is high, and the larger the infarct, the greater the danger and the higher the risk of death. Symptoms of a cerebral bridge infarction are numerous and complex, and may include dizziness, nausea, vomiting, paralysis of the limbs and inability to move, coma, high fever, gastrointestinal bleeding, and can be severe enough to cause life-threatening cardiac and respiratory arrest. The treatment of cerebral pontine infarction is mainly thrombolytic therapy within the time window, beyond the thrombolytic time window, then take aspirin, clopidogrel and other antiplatelet therapy, as well as supportive therapy to maintain the patient’s vital signs, as well as to prevent the emergence of a variety of complications, but the specific choice needs to be combined with the actual situation of the patient. So if you find a patient with cerebral pontine infarction, you need to call 120 in time for medical treatment.