When will limbs and speech return after surgery for left thalamic basal ganglia hemorrhage?

After surgery for left thalamus basal ganglia hemorrhage, limbs and speech usually cannot be fully recovered, but only through treatment to alleviate the symptoms and delay the condition, but the specific recovery time cannot be standardized, depending on the prognosis and the degree of hemorrhage.
Left thalamus basal ganglia hemorrhage is more serious, the nerve damage is relatively large, the preoperative limb movement disorder and speech disorder can not be fully restored to normal after surgery, only through treatment and functional training to reduce the symptoms, so that the patient basically returned to normal, but the specific time is not clear.
If the amount of bleeding in the left thalamic basal ganglia is relatively small, the effect is clearer after the surgery, which can effectively improve the limb hemiparesis and speech disorder, and can lead to the patient’s life to return to normal, and the recovery time can be shortened; however, if the amount of bleeding is relatively large, and the damage of neurological function is more serious, the prognosis is poorer after the treatment, and the recovery time will be prolonged, and the symptoms may be present for life.
At present, after the left thalamus basal ganglia surgery, regular review is required. If the patient has obvious hemiparesis of the limbs and severe language dysfunction, he/she needs to be hospitalized for observation and functional training under the guidance of a professional physician.