Can you recover from a 10 ml brain hemorrhage?

The recovery from a brain hemorrhage of 10 ml depends on the site of the hemorrhage. If the hemorrhage is 10 ml in the basal ganglia of the cerebral hemisphere, the recovery is generally better. If it is a brainstem hemorrhage of 10 ml, then the patient’s prognosis is poor. If the hemorrhage in the cerebral hemisphere is less than 30 ml, the patient can be treated conservatively by applying intravenous dehydrating and cranial pressure lowering drugs, and the patient’s clinical symptoms can be reduced after the edema is reduced and the blood is absorbed. If there are sequelae of neurological deficits, the patient can recover with subsequent rehabilitation treatment. In the case of posterior cerebral hemorrhage, such as brainstem hemorrhage, if the hemorrhage volume is greater than 5 ml, the edema is more serious and can compress the medulla oblongata in severe cases, which can lead to life-threatening respiratory and cardiac arrest. If the bleeding volume of cerebellar hemispheres is greater than 15ml, the edema can also compress the brainstem when it is serious, which can lead to life-threatening effects. Therefore, there is a direct correlation between whether the patient can recover from a brain hemorrhage of 10 ml and the location of the hemorrhage.