In fact, the treatment plan for children with intracranial hemorrhage is determined by the amount of bleeding and the site of bleeding, for example, mild intracranial hemorrhage in newborns, if the recovery is better after medication, it usually does not leave significant sequelae; but when it comes to severe intracranial hemorrhage, the active use of medication needs to be combined with surgical treatment to remove the intracranial hematoma and stop bleeding and other operations to help the child get through it.
So intracranial hemorrhage in children does not generalize, but also depends on the actual situation of each individual.