After a second episode of brain hemorrhage, you need to seek immediate medical attention and complete a CT scan of the head. If the bleeding volume is small, conservative treatment can be continued. Conservative treatment mainly includes actively controlling the blood pressure level, dynamically monitoring the head CT condition, and observing the patient’s vital signs changes. During the period of conservative treatment, dehydration and cranial pressure-lowering drugs can be used appropriately. After the patient’s condition is stabilized, if there is limb dysfunction, rehabilitation therapy can be intervened at an early stage. If the bleeding volume of the second episode of cerebral hemorrhage is large, surgical treatment may be needed to control the symptoms of increased intracranial pressure caused by the patient’s large bleeding volume. The prognosis of this type of patients after active surgical treatment is relatively poor, because there has been a basic medical history of the first episode of cerebral hemorrhage, the patient’s vascular condition will not be particularly good, and the prognosis is also relatively poor, but through active early surgical intervention, the patient can be made to survive, and the subsequent early intervention in the rehabilitation therapy will be helpful for the recovery of the condition.