What to do about aphasia after cerebral hemangioma intervention

Aphasia after cerebral hemangioma intervention surgery can be treated by taking nutritive neurological drugs, hyperbaric oxygen, and speech training. Aphasia in patients after cerebral hemangioma intervention surgery is most often due to rupture and bleeding of the cerebral aneurysm or intraoperative traction damage to the language function area of the brain. Patients often have slurred speech and often cannot understand what others say. Patients with incomplete aphasia after cerebral hemangioma intervention surgery can be treated with nutritional nerve medications such as vitamin B1 and methylcobalamin and hyperbaric oxygen under the guidance of a doctor. Speech training such as relaxation training, respiratory training, jaw, lip and tongue training, soft palate movement training can also be carried out to promote recovery. If the patient is completely aphasic, it may be due to the complete infarction of the language function area of the brain or the serious destruction during the operation. It is usually difficult to recover completely even after treatment, and different degrees of language dysfunction may occur. Patients who have symptoms of aphasia after cerebral hemangioma intervention surgery should go to the hospital for examination in time and be actively treated under the guidance of the doctor.