The possible sequelae of intracranial hemorrhage in the head from a fall are related to the damaged part and treatment, etc. The common ones are hemiparesis, unfavorable speech, and crooked mouth.
1. Damage to the frontal lobe: memory loss, slow reaction, weakness of one side or one limb, motor aphasia, urinary and fecal disorders, etc. may remain.
2. Damage to the parietal lobe: may be left with sensory deficits in the limb opposite to the lesion, inability to calculate, left-right dyscognition, dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyspraxia, etc.
3. Damage to the temporal lobe: there may be sensory aphasia, naming aphasia, phantom smell, near-memory impairment, personality change, emotional abnormality, blindness in the same upward quadrant of the visual field of both eyes on the opposite side.
4. Damage to the occipital lobe: there may be cortical blindness in both eyes, distortion of vision and other symptoms.
5. Damage to the internal capsule: symptoms such as weakness of the limb on the opposite side of the lesion, sensory disorder and hemianopsia may remain.
6. Damage to the thalamus: it may leave symptoms such as sensory disorder and spontaneous pain in the limb opposite to the lesion.
7. Damage to the cerebellum: ataxia, vertigo, nystagmus and other symptoms may remain.
8. Damage to the brainstem: swallowing disorders, hoarseness, diplopia, peripheral facial nerve palsy and other symptoms may remain.
The sequelae of intracranial hemorrhage after a fall are affected by a variety of factors, of which the site of injury is the most important factor, in addition, if you actively carry out standardized treatment, the probability of sequelae will be reduced, and some patients may have no sequelae, but if you fail to actively carry out the treatment, the sequelae will be relatively heavy.