Most patients with brain hemorrhage are caused by hypertensive disorders, and a small percentage are caused by other factors such as trauma and aneurysms. Patients with cerebral hemorrhage may have a life-threatening condition unless they have a large cerebral hemorrhage, or repeated cerebral hemorrhages, or the hemorrhage is in a very critical area. Most cerebral hemorrhages are treated with only partial sequelae, but they do not directly affect life expectancy. If the bleeding is small or not in a critical functional area, the patient may recover relatively well, even without sequelae. If the site of bleeding is relatively critical and the amount of bleeding is high, some sequelae may remain, such as lack of fluency in speech, inflexibility of limbs, numbness of some limbs, and loss of memory and responsiveness, but these do not directly affect life expectancy. Therefore, for most patients with cerebral hemorrhage, as long as the bleeding volume is not too large at the time and the bleeding site is very critical, and the acute cerebral hemorrhage period is passed smoothly, only the sequelae will not directly affect the life expectancy. However, patients with cerebral hemorrhage must pay attention to the recurrence of cerebral hemorrhage, especially to control the blood pressure, which will not directly affect the life expectancy of the patient if it is not reoccurring under good control. Patients can gradually improve their quality of life by controlling the risk factors of cerebrovascular disease and doing more functional training.