Minimally invasive puncture surgery in neurosurgery to treat brain hemorrhage without craniotomy

       Most of the patients with cerebral hemorrhage have a history of hypertension, which is common in middle-aged and elderly people, and the onset of the disease is more frequent in the cold season, mostly in the active state. The focal neurological symptoms are related to the site of bleeding and the amount of bleeding.  For conventional treatment of cerebral hemorrhage, except for small amount of hemorrhage which can be treated conservatively with good results, most of them need to be treated surgically, and craniotomy has high damage and disability rate, and most families can hardly afford it because of long recovery time and high medical expenses.  Minimally invasive puncture surgery, on the other hand, is less invasive and greatly shortens the recovery time of patients after draining the hematoma, and has occupied an increasingly important position in the treatment of cerebral hemorrhage in recent years.