Can an 80-year-old man recover from cerebral hemorrhage paralysis?

Whether an 80-year-old man with cerebral hemorrhage paralysis can recover is related to a number of factors, such as the amount of bleeding, the location of the bleeding, and whether there are underlying diseases, etc., and it is more difficult to recover in most cases.
If the bleeding volume is small, the bleeding site is shallow or avoids the important location, and the damage to the brain tissue is small, usually after active treatment and later rehabilitation, the patient can gradually regain the function of the limbs, or even return to the preoperative state.
However, when the amount of bleeding is large, no matter whether it is conservative treatment or surgical treatment for cerebral hemorrhage patients, the damage to normal brain tissues caused by hematoma or surgical operation is relatively heavy, and it is difficult for the patients to recover their limb paralysis to the state before the onset of the disease despite the active rehabilitation in the later stage of the treatment, in most of the cases, it is only an improvement compared with that at the onset of the disease.
If the patient suffers from some underlying diseases, such as diabetes mellitus, coronary heart disease, pulmonary heart disease, etc., the prognosis of cerebral hemorrhage is generally poorer than that of patients without underlying diseases, and the paralysis of limbs is usually more difficult to recover.
It is recommended to go to a regular hospital for consultation and follow the advice of a professional physician to actively carry out rehabilitation exercises.