An intracerebral hemorrhage is bleeding in the brain caused by the rupture of a blood vessel within the head. See also
Alternative Names
Intracranial hemorrhage; Hemorrhage - intracerebral; Hypertensive hemorrhage
Causes, incidence, and risk factors
Internal bleeding can occur in any part of the brain. Blood may accumulate in the brain tissues itself, or in the space between the brain and the membranes covering it. The bleeding may be isolated to part of one hemisphere (
An intracerebral hemorrhage can be caused by a traumatic brain injury or abnormalities of the blood vessels (
Blood irritates the brain tissues, causing swelling (cerebral edema). It can collect into a mass called a hematoma. Either swelling or a hematoma will increase pressure on brain tissues and can rapidly destroy them.
Symptoms vary depending on the location of the bleed and the amount of brain tissue affected. The symptoms usually develop suddenly, without warning, often during activity. They may occasionally develop in a stepwise, episodic manner or they may get progressively worse.
Other factors that raise the risk of intracerebral hemorrhage include the following:
- Blood and
bleeding disorders -
Disseminated intravascular coagulation -
Hemophilia -
Sickle cell anemia - Leukemia
- Decreased levels of blood
platelets
-
- Use of aspirin or anticoagulant medications (blood thinners)
-
Liver disease (associated with increased bleeding risk in general) - Cerebral
amyloid or brain tumors
Premature infants (born earlier than 35 weeks gestation) will sometimes have bleeding into the ventricles (fluid-filled spaces) in the brain. This type of bleed is called intra-ventricular hemorrhage (IVH). This occurs in the first day or so of life and is usually not preventable. The outcome is variable, depending on the severity of bleed and ranges from no apparent damage to severe disability. Diagnosis is by
















