Do brain attacks get worse?

Brain infarction will not become more and more serious, and most patients can be clinically cured or get better if they can be treated timely and correctly, and some patients may have certain sequelae. Patients with cerebral infarction should be treated as early as possible and given thrombolytic therapy in time within the time window of thrombolytic therapy. For those who exceed the time window of thrombolytic therapy, aspirin antiplatelet aggregation and neuroprotective therapy should be given as early as possible. Also, control the risk factors of cerebrovascular disease, such as actively regulating blood pressure if necessary in hypertensive patients, regulating lipids and stabilizing plaque in hyperlipidemic patients, actively lowering blood sugar in diabetic patients, and lowering homocysteine in hyperhomocysteinemia. If the patient has combined somatic dysfunction, rehabilitation should be given in a timely manner after the condition is stabilized.