In our daily lives, our bodies seem to be functioning calmly, but sometimes a sudden “storm” can break that calm, and brain haemorrhage is such a “danger” in the head as a time bomb, whose consequences are too bad to imagine once detonated. Therefore, understanding it and preventing it are essential for us all. What kind of brain hemorrhage is a “demon” brain hemorrhage, or, in short, a cerebral vascular fracture.
The human brain is like a sophisticated and busy “city”, and the veins are like the interlocking “high road”, which transports oxygen and nutrients and sustains the normal work of “residents” (neurological cells) in various regions of the brain. But when certain causes overburden the cerebral vascular wall and break it, the blood is like an uncontrolled “flood” that flows out of the veins and flows into the surrounding brain tissues, crushing and destroying these fragile neurons, which in turn causes a series of serious symptoms.
What are the triggers for the bomb?
High blood pressure: the number one “coercion” of brain haemorrhage. In long-term high blood pressure, the vascular wall is subjected to excessive stress, such as an over-inflated balloon, a gradual deterioration of elasticity, a fragile tube wall, in particular a small artery in the brain, which can easily break blood if the blood pressure suddenly rises (e.g. in cases of emotional agitation, intense exercise, severe defecation, etc.). Many elderly people do not usually attach importance to blood pressure control and feel that it is nothing but occasional dizziness.
2. Brain artery sclerosis: As age increases, blood resin abnormalities, bad living habits (smoking, alcohol consumption, high sugar fat diets, etc.), the cerebrovascular wall is gradually forming porridge sclerosis, making the blood vessels narrow and rigid, increasing the old resistance to blood circulation, and uneven respiration, with a significant increase in the risk of rupture in some areas of weakness. It’s like an old pipe, the inner wall is covered with dirt, and the water’s volatilized.
Brain vascular malformations: This is a natural “time bomb” in which some brain vessels “scramble” during embryonic development and form unusual vascular groups or structures, such as spongiform vascular tumours, anaesthesia, etc., in which normal blood flow is disturbed, the vascular wall is under abnormal pressure and is slightly irritated, such as minor head trauma, which may cause brain haemorrhage.
Body alert after detonation
Brain haemorrhage is acute and symptoms tend to peak in minutes to hours. The common first manifestation is headaches, which are not the usual headaches, but rather the severe pains, often associated with spray vomiting, and which are so intense that they “wow” without warning. As haemorrhage increases and brain failure increases, physical activity can also be problematic, with one arm, leg suddenly weak, numb, holding things unstable and dragging, and severely paralysing in the bed; speech can be confused, either speaking vaguely, as if it contained something, or suddenly speaking out of the way, with no complete words in the mouth; and, worse, unconscious consciousness, unresponsive to outside calls and life at stake. If haemorrhage occurs in critical parts of the brain, such as the brain stem, and the breathing, heart and heartbeat centre is affected, it may also endanger life in an instant and leave no room for healing.
Build a line of defence against a “cranial crisis” to prevent brain haemorrhage, starting at the point of life. Patients with high blood pressure must take regular medication and regular blood pressure measurements to keep their blood pressure steady within normal limits, with low salt and fat on diet, more vegetables and vegetables and coarse grains, less salt and fat “accumulation” and less vascular burden. The elderly and middle-aged are regularly examined for brain artery sclerosis, haematosis is abnormally and promptly changed, smoking is off limits and the blood vessels are “age-reducing”. Young people also need to avoid long nights, overwork and “silent” cerebrovascular patterns. The day-to-day exercise selects moderate projects such as walking, Tai Chi, to avoid severe head impact and reduce the risk of cerebrovascular malformations. In case of suspected brain haemorrhage, call 120 at once, flat-bed and head-directed side to prevent vomit suffocation, fight for seconds for medical attention, use scientific protection and timely action to save time for subsequent treatment, and secure life from brain haemorrhage.