It is not clear when symptoms of cerebral hemorrhage begin, but most patients experience discomfort within minutes to hours of the onset of symptoms.
Generally, cerebral hemorrhage starts suddenly, often without aura, so the time of patients’ accompanying symptoms is not clear, but most of them appear between minutes and hours or between days and weeks. It is worth noting that most patients suffer from cerebral hemorrhage triggered by factors such as emotional fluctuation, physical labor, sex, and straining to relieve bowel movements, and common symptoms include dizziness, headache, and numbness and weakness of the limbs.
There are some differences in the severity of symptoms and bleeding time for different bleeding sites and bleeding volume. Basal nucleus hemorrhage patients are prone to hemiparesis, hemiplegia, homonymous hemianopsia, etc. Lobar hemorrhage patients have obvious headache, while cerebral pontine hemorrhage patients enter coma soon after the onset of the disease. Most people with cerebellar hemorrhage have headache, dizziness, and vomiting, while those with ventricular hemorrhage are in critical condition.
It is recommended that people with chronically high blood pressure and poor diet should monitor their condition to prevent cerebral hemorrhage. Those diagnosed with cerebral hemorrhage should actively cooperate with their doctors to reduce the impact on their health.