Diagnosis and Surgical Treatment of Spontaneous Cerebellar Hemorrhage
Keywords:
spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage; surgical treatment; central nervous system; hypertension; pathological diagnosis; intracranial hemorrhage; brain parenchyma; superior cerebellar artery; incidence number; hemorrhagic diathesisAbstract
In the past, the diagnosis of spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage was mostly pathological diagnosis after death. This disease is far from a rare disease, accounting for about 0.9-13% of intracranial intraparenchymal hemorrhage, with an average of 6.1%, and the cerebellum accounts for 10% of the weight of the central nervous system. The number of cases can be imagined. Although this disease can occur at any age, it is more common in the elderly, consistent with the age at onset of all intracranial hemorrhages. Men are more affected. 50 to 70% of the causes are hypertension. Other causes include vascular malformations, aneurysms, hemorrhagic diathesis, trauma, tumor bed hemorrhage, and hemorrhagic infarcts