Cerebral hemangioma generally refers to an intracranial aneurysm, which is usually not completely curable without surgery.
Intracranial aneurysm is an aneurysm formed when the arterial vessels inside the brain are abnormally expanded. If the aneurysm does not rupture and bleed and is small in size, there may be no obvious clinical symptoms; if it is large in size, it may compress the surrounding blood vessels and nerves, and symptoms such as dizziness and headache may occur; if the aneurysm ruptures and bleeds, the patient may experience symptoms such as severe headache and impaired consciousness, and need to seek medical treatment in time.
For smaller and asymptomatic intracranial aneurysms, they can be treated conservatively for the time being, without surgery, with regular checkups and keeping the blood pressure within a reasonable range, but conservative treatment cannot cure the aneurysm.
For large or ruptured intracranial aneurysms, surgery should be performed according to the doctor’s instructions, and rehabilitation training should be carried out as soon as possible after the surgery, meanwhile, avoiding emotional fluctuations, preventing rebleeding, maintaining enough sleep, avoiding fatigue, and so on.
It is recommended that patients who have found intracranial aneurysms should seek medical treatment in time and under the guidance of doctors, so as to avoid delaying the condition and causing serious consequences.