How to treat blocked cerebral blood vessels

  The main treatment measures for cerebrovascular blockage include drug therapy, interventional therapy, surgical therapy and rehabilitation training therapy. The principle of how to choose is to grasp is to make specific treatment measures according to the individual situation of the patient’s condition.  Cerebrovascular blockage is clinically known as cerebral infarction. The cause of cerebrovascular blockage is related to atherosclerosis and narrowing of blood vessels caused by diabetes, hypertension and hyperlipidemia. After cerebrovascular blockage, patients may experience hemiplegia, speech disorders, ataxia, limb numbness, and mental and psychological changes. Patients with mild cerebral infarction can consider oral medication or intravenous drip antithrombotic drugs and vasodilator drugs to relieve cerebrovascular blockage. For more serious cerebrovascular blockage, thrombolytic therapy can be considered within the time window, and outside the time window, treatment measures such as surgical thrombus retrieval therapy or interventional therapy by stent placement can be performed. Interventional therapy should be a more effective and less harmful treatment for cerebrovascular blockage, and is still widely used in neurology. By placing a stent, the blood supply can be restored to the ischemic area of the brain tissue, minimizing neurological deficits. The efficacy of interventional treatment is still very reliable when performed within an effective time.  In conclusion, patients with cerebrovascular blockage need to quickly improve the examination and choose the right measures to obtain the best results of treatment.