Cerebral hemorrhage is mostly caused by hypertension combined with small arteriosclerosis and other diseases.
1. The most common cause of cerebral hemorrhage is hypertension combined with small arteriosclerosis, and the mechanism is that the small arteries in the brain rupture due to chronic lesions under the effect of long-term high blood pressure. Long-term hypertension can make the small arteries in the brain undergo vitreous degeneration, fibrinoid necrosis, and even the formation of micro-aneurysms or entrapment aneurysms, which can easily lead to vascular rupture and hemorrhage when the blood pressure suddenly rises on the basis of this condition.
2. Other causes include arterio-venous vascular malformation, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, blood diseases (such as leukemia, aplastic anemia, thrombocytopenic purpura, hemophilia, erythrocytosis, and sickle cell disease), anticoagulant or thrombolytic therapy, and so on.
It is recommended that regular body checkups and monitoring of blood pressure are usually required. When the presence of high blood pressure, vascular malformations, blood disorders, etc. is detected, it should be necessary to go to a regular hospital in time to reduce the possibility of cerebral hemorrhage.