Cerebral infarction occipital lobe damage double blindness can still be recovered

Blindness from damage to the occipital lobe of the brain infarction may be recovered if treatment is timely, but full recovery is unlikely if effective treatment is not provided. The occipital lobe of the brain is the visual cortical center, and visual impairment occurs when the occipital lobe is damaged, resulting in blindness. Damage to the occipital lobe caused by a cerebral infarction requires prompt treatment of the primary disease, i.e., cerebral infarction, i.e., prompt thrombolytic therapy, and recovery is possible. If thrombolysis is not possible, or if subsequent treatment fails to improve the visual center damage, full recovery is unlikely, and symptomatic treatment may result in partial improvement. If the patient is diagnosed with cerebral infarction, he should go to the hospital for treatment as early as possible. The earlier the treatment, the better the prognosis, and the symptoms of binocular blindness may be restored.