Cerebral thrombosis, cerebral infarction hanging neurology, cerebral thrombosis is a type of cerebral infarction, which is caused by cerebral atherosclerosis, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, hypertension, hyperhomocysteinemia and other causes, and is the most common cerebral infarction in clinical practice. Cerebral infarction is divided into cerebral thrombosis, lacunar cerebral infarction, cerebral watershed infarction and cerebral tethering depending on the cause of the patient, and patients can all experience cerebral ischemia and hypoxia, which can even cause ischemic necrosis and softening. Patients can present with different symptoms, depending mainly on the location of the lesion and the size of the lesion. Patients with large cerebral infarction can present with impaired consciousness, while if the patient has a small cerebral infarction, he or she presents with focal signs and symptoms. If the patient’s lesion invades the frontal or temporal lobe, it can manifest as psychiatric symptoms and seizures, and the patient should be promptly hospitalized in the neurology department after the onset.