What’s wrong with occasional disorientation while recovering from a cerebral infarction?

Occasional non-recognition during the recovery period of cerebral infarction may be due to the involvement of cortical function by the lesion, resulting in cognitive impairment.
Cerebral infarction is a kind of ischemic cerebrovascular disease, which can cause various symptoms of focal neurological deficits, and clinically common manifestations such as unilateral limb numbness and weakness and unfavorable speech.
When the disease involves the frontal, temporal and parietal cortex of the dominant cerebral hemisphere, the patient may also suffer from disorders of higher intellectual activities, such as amnesia, memory loss, inability to concentrate, and decreased executive ability.
Occasional non-recognition during recovery from cerebral infarction may be the result of the primary lesion affecting cognitive function, causing patients to develop disorders of character orientation.
Effective radical treatment is not possible at present, and secondary prevention treatment of cerebrovascular disease is needed to prevent stroke recurrence leading to exacerbation of the condition, which can be combined with cognitive function improvement drugs, such as Idebenone and so on.
Drugs need to be taken under the guidance of a physician, do not take on your own.