Both cerebral hemorrhage and heart attack require emergency treatment. If they occur at the same time, it is necessary to prioritize the treatment of the serious side and then the other side after stabilization.
Cerebral hemorrhage is prone to complicate cerebro-cardiac syndrome due to the damage to the central nervous system and the loss of control of the body’s organs. If the patient’s cerebral hemorrhage volume is relatively large or bleeding for the main parts such as cerebral bridge, then the priority should be to deal with cerebral hemorrhage, timely medication such as mannitol, interventional or surgical dehydration and decompression.
If the patient has a large myocardial infarction, urgent interventional surgery is needed to stabilize the blood supply to the myocardium or other organs. Combined with cerebral hemorrhage, anticoagulation such as warfarin and thrombolysis such as alteplase are generally no longer used to prevent aggravation of cerebral hemorrhage.
Cerebral hemorrhage with cardiac infarction is an extremely critical condition. Physicians will quickly provide options after professional evaluation, and family members and guardians need to make choices quickly to prevent the condition from worsening.