Cerebrovascular disease is a common disease with high incidence, high disability rate and easy recurrence, and it is very important to prevent the disease before it occurs. There are the following risk factors for cerebrovascular disease: non-interventional risk factors include age, gender, race, family history, etc. The interventional risk factors that can be changed include hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, transient ischemic attack, hyperlipidemia, cerebral blood supply artery stenosis, obesity, smoking, alcoholism, hyperhomocysteinemia, hyperfibrinogenemia, etc. We recommend that men over 45 years old and women over 55 years old, especially those with hypertension, diabetes, heart disease and related family history, should go to the neurology department of the hospital for a comprehensive risk factor assessment, in addition to monitoring blood pressure, checking blood glucose, blood lipids, electrocardiogram, should also do a 2-hour postprandial blood glucose, that is, glucose tolerance test, check the four coagulation items to see fibrinogen, do neck vascular ultrasound, TCD, cardiac ultrasound and so on. If the above risk factors are found, you should insist on taking medication under the guidance of your doctor. Especially, patients with heart disease and atrial fibrillation should be treated actively because atrial fibrillation can cause cardiogenic cerebral embolism, accounting for 20% of all ischemic cerebrovascular diseases, and is more likely to recur, with multiple lesions or large infarct area and poor prognosis. There are many antihypertensive and hypoglycemic drugs, and we need to choose the right ones individually under the guidance of doctors. Anti-platelet aggregation and thrombosis prevention drugs we commonly use include BAY aspirin or clopidogrel, anti-atherosclerosis and lipid-lowering drugs such as simvastatin and lovastatin. We also need to develop a healthy lifestyle: quit smoking and limit alcohol, balanced diet, moderate exercise, regular life, psychological balance, weight loss, etc. If the stenosis of the cerebral blood supply artery is severe and the symptoms are obvious, surgical treatment by carotid artery stripping or stenting of the stenotic artery is also an option. After taking medication and changing your therapeutic lifestyle, you should also contact your doctor frequently, go to the hospital for regular follow-up examinations, and adjust your medication according to the specific situation. If early manifestations of cerebrovascular accidents occur, such as loss of speech, numbness and weakness of one side of the face or limb, crooked face, severe headache, sudden vertigo, etc., even if they are transient, you should go to the hospital immediately, because transient symptoms also indicate that there has been a transient Cerebral ischemic attack, but also easy to develop cerebrovascular disease, and time is the brain, only within 3 hours of the onset of cerebrovascular disease to get treatment, it is possible to minimize the damage to the brain. To prevent cerebrovascular disease, we have a few health figures to achieve the goal of the summary is relatively simple and clear, you can remember: first of all, 0, that is, smoking is 0, to quit smoking; 2.6, on behalf of LDL to 2.6mmol/L or less, because it is now believed that LDL is more important than cholesterol, triglycerides can aggravate the atherosclerosis of blood lipid components; 6. The blood sugar should be lowered to below 6mmol/L; 30, is to insist on 30 minutes of exercise every day; 2527 is the waist circumference, below 2 feet 5 for women and below 2 feet 7 for men; 140/90 is to control the blood pressure below 140/90mmHg, and the blood pressure should be lowered to below 130/80mmHg for combined diabetes. 0, 2.6, 6, 30, 2527, 140/90, 130/80. These numbers are our health code, remember, control to meet the standard, combined with a healthy lifestyle, we can minimize the risk of cerebrovascular disease.