The most common site of cerebral hemorrhage is the basal ganglia region. When the cerebral hemisphere bleeds, the bruising can compress or destroy brain tissue, damaging the corticospinal tracts of the brain that are responsible for the movement of the contralateral limb, resulting in immobility of the right side of the patient’s body. The inability to move the right side of the body caused by brain hemorrhage can improve with the gradual absorption of the hemorrhage and the improvement of intracranial conditions, but the recovery is not only related to the site and amount of hemorrhage, but also to the patient’s own condition. If a patient with cerebral hemorrhage is unable to move the right side of the body, there is no impairment of consciousness, and the amount of bleeding is small, most patients can be cured after acupuncture and functional exercise. If some patients are left with sequelae, they will often recover more satisfactorily after 3 months to 6 months of recovery, combined with some treatments such as functional exercise, Chinese medicine acupuncture and neuroelectric stimulation.