Cerebral infarction is also known as cerebral infarction, hemiplegia after cerebral infarction can not be self-healing.
Cerebral infarction hemiplegia generally refers to the cerebral arteriosclerosis, arterial plaque formation caused by narrowing of blood vessels, occlusion of narrowed blood vessels, or unstable plaque dislodgement caused by arterial embolism, which ultimately leads to ischemia and hypoxia necrosis of brain tissues in arterial vessels innervated areas, and neurological deficits occur, resulting in cerebral infarction hemiplegia. Therefore, in terms of the pathogenesis, it is not self-curable.
Whether hemiplegia caused by cerebral infarction can be recovered is related to whether the treatment is timely, the severity of the lesion and whether the rehabilitation treatment is timely. Patients who are treated with thrombolysis and vascular intervention within 4.5 hours of the onset of the disease can generally recover successfully.
For patients who are not treated in time, or whose thrombolysis and vascular intervention fail, there may be sequelae and it is difficult for them to recover completely. However, the sequelae can be mitigated through rehabilitation therapy to improve the quality of life of patients, and some of them can take care of themselves and return to work.
Cerebral infarction patients in serious cases, usually lead to hemiplegia, more difficult to recover, and even less likely to heal themselves, so the symptoms must be timely hospital treatment, so as not to miss the condition.