After autumn, the weather gradually becomes cooler, and the number of hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage patients in the department increases significantly at this seasonal change. Since hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage is a disease with high disability and high mortality rate, even if these patients receive the best treatment, most of them will be left with certain disabilities to a greater or lesser extent, therefore, it is more important to prevent the occurrence of such diseases. Can hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage be prevented? As the name suggests, this is a disease closely related to hypertension. Long-term hypertension and atherosclerosis can lead to the formation of tiny aneurysms in small blood vessels deep in the brain, which can be triggered to rupture and form life-threatening brain hemorrhages when blood pressure continues to rise or fluctuate significantly. As you can see, the first task to prevent brain hemorrhage is to control blood pressure. Many patients come to the hospital with no clear history of hypertension, but during their hospitalization their blood pressure is so high that they usually need to be given intravenous medication or several antihypertensive drugs at the same time for a long time to bring their blood pressure down to normal. Not all hypertension is symptomatic, so it is important to take your blood pressure frequently after middle age, and to pay particular attention to morning blood pressure management. If the diagnosis of hypertension is clear, you must take your medication under the guidance of a specialist and make appropriate changes to your lifestyle habits, such as quitting smoking and drinking, eating a low-salt diet, reducing your weight, and avoiding excessive emotional stress. At the same time, abnormal lipidemia and diabetes are the difficult brothers of hypertension, these two diseases will significantly increase the risk of atherosclerosis, if these two diseases also need to be actively treated together. In autumn and winter, there is a significant temperature difference between morning and evening, the temperature tends to change abruptly, and the air becomes drier. These factors often lead to increased blood viscosity, blood vessel spasms, and significant blood pressure fluctuations, resulting in a high incidence of cerebrovascular disease. In such a season, elderly people suffering from hypertension should pay more attention to their blood pressure control, pay more attention to the weather forecast, pay attention to warmth, keep the appropriate temperature indoors, and elderly people with morning exercise habits should especially pay attention to warmth when they go out to avoid obvious fluctuations in blood pressure caused by excessive hot and cold stimulation. To drink more water, less sedentary, less card seat on the emotional ups and downs, in order to be able to successfully pass this eventful autumn.