Ventricular hemorrhage from high blood pressure is serious. Cerebral hemorrhage starts suddenly, often without aura. Common triggering factors include emotional fluctuation, physical labor, drinking after meals, sex, straining to defecate and climate change. Patients often have a sudden headache, head swelling, followed by vomiting, and may soon develop consciousness and neurological dysfunction, and progressive aggravation. The condition of ventricular hemorrhage is very critical. The patient often enters coma within 1 to 2 hours after the onset of the disease, and develops convulsions or paralysis of the limbs, with positive pathological signs bilaterally. There may be signs of meningeal irritation, excessive sweating, vomiting, and deafferentation. Breathing is deep with snoring, then turns irregular. Pulse also changes from slow and strong to fine and irregular. Blood pressure is unstable. A drop in blood pressure and an increase in body temperature usually indicate a poor prognosis. If you have any of the above symptoms, you should consult a doctor as soon as possible to avoid delaying your condition, and you need to cooperate actively during the treatment to avoid affecting the quality of your life in the future.