Which recovers faster, a cerebral thrombosis or a cerebral hemorrhage?

Cerebral thrombosis and cerebral hemorrhage, if it is in the premise of the same lesion volume, cerebral hemorrhage will recover faster. Cerebral thrombosis refers to cerebral infarction, which is a series of signs of neurological deficits caused by ischemia, hypoxia, and necrosis of the brain tissue in the area supplied by the blood vessel after it is blocked. Necrosis is irreversible, so recovery is poor. The recovery of brain function relies on the compensatory effect of the surrounding healthy and normal brain tissues. The destructive effect of cerebral hemorrhage on brain tissues is relatively small, which is mainly due to the occupying effect produced by the hematoma itself, which produces compressive symptoms on the surrounding tissues as well as edema of the surrounding brain tissues, resulting in temporary loss of function. If the hemorrhage volume is not particularly large, when the hematoma is absorbed, the brain tissue that is not completely necrotic can recover part of its function, so the recovery will be faster than cerebral thrombosis.