Can high blood pressure cause brain hemorrhage?

Patients with hypertension can develop cerebral hemorrhage. Patients with clinically diagnosed hypertension who have not undergone regular treatment or have intermittent medication and do not follow medical advice. Such patients will have high or low blood pressure, and over time, the blood vessels will be damaged, and one day when they are particularly agitated or when the blood pressure peak comes, the blood vessels will rupture and bleed. This complication of hypertension cerebral hemorrhage is very much in the clinic, 70%-80% of patients with cerebral hemorrhage that is hypertension. Of course, there are some patients with cerebral hemorrhage not because of hypertension, but because of congenital abnormal development of cerebral aneurysm. The proportion of these patients is relatively low in cerebral hemorrhage, and most of them are hypertensive. Therefore, once hypertension is detected, we should actively intervene, otherwise the brain hemorrhage will cause headache and dizziness in mild cases, which will be absorbed slowly and will not leave sequelae. A more moderate degree can lead to lifelong disability, and more serious cases can be fatal. This is particularly common in young people, who can neglect hypertension treatment and become unable to care for themselves and become completely bedridden and paralyzed. Therefore, once hypertension occurs, it is important to seek active treatment, otherwise the incidence of cerebral hemorrhage will be higher. Brain hemorrhage is also divided into how much it is. If it is a small amount of bleeding, the patient can absorb it on his own without leaving any sequelae. Moderate bleeding that affects limb function or leads to increased cranial pressure may require neurosurgical treatment with cerebral puncture and drainage. Particularly severe bleeding may require cranial decompression, and the doctor will decide on the treatment and method depending on the severity of the bleeding.