What’s wrong with being unable to walk after a brain hemorrhage?

The inability to walk after a cerebral hemorrhage is a sequela of nerve or tissue damage due to the compression of nerves or brain tissue by the hemorrhaging lesion. Cerebral hemorrhage is a type of stroke, commonly caused by high blood pressure combined with atherosclerosis of tiny arteries, with rupture of blood vessels in the brain and accumulation of blood in the brain parenchyma. Cerebral hemorrhage can occur during emotional excitement or activities, and after the bleeding foci compress the nerves or brain tissues, it can cause dizziness, headache, hemiparesis of limbs, hemiplegia, hemiplegia and other manifestations. After cerebral hemorrhage is rescued and treated, there can still be sequelae such as sensory impairment, muscle weakness or cognitive impairment, among which hemiparesis is the most common, with inability to move one side of the limb, unfavorable movement or loss of limb muscle strength. Patients with cerebral hemorrhage need to seek immediate medical attention for emergency treatment and early postoperative rehabilitation to improve their quality of life.