Patients with frontal and temporal bleeding in the head should be hospitalized and put on absolute bed rest for at least 3-4 weeks, with eating, sleeping, drinking, and going to the bathroom all needing to be done lying flat in bed. Minimize activities that may lead to increased bleeding or induce rebleeding. At the same time, dehydration treatment for hemorrhage to reduce cerebral edema, such as mannitol, glycerol fructose, and sodium heptaoside, is commonly used, and attention is paid to monitoring the patient’s blood electrolytes and renal function during the medication period, while reinforcing rehydration support therapy to prevent excessive dehydration. Pay attention to monitoring the patient’s blood pressure, if the blood pressure is too high, the patient needs to use antihypertensive drugs for regulation, commonly used long-acting antihypertensive drugs such as nifedipine controlled-release tablets, amlodipine tablets, valsartan, etc. Nimodipine is also used to prevent delayed vasospasm if the patient has frontotemporal hemorrhage into the ventricles or if it causes secondary hemorrhage in the subarachnoid space.