A stroke is the death or damage of brain tissue that occurs when the brain does not get enough blood and oxygen. The result of this is a loss of function usually of an arm or leg or both or a loss of speech or sometimes the loss of balance and co-ordination. Strokes can cause a loss of vision also. The effect of a stroke is usually confined to one side of the body except where the stroke causes a generalized loss of balance (ataxia).
A stroke can be either ischemic or hemorrhagic. In an ischemic stroke, the blood supply to part of the brain is cut off. This can be due to plaque formation, or a blood clot blocking a blood vessel. In a hemorrhagic stroke, a blood vessel bursts. This allows blood to leak into an area of the brain and destroy it. The types of Ischemic stroke are:
Cerebral haemorrhage occurs when a blood vessel bursts inside the brain and bleeds (haemorrhages). With a haemorrhage, extra damage is done to the brain tissue by the blood that seeps into it. A haemorrhagic stroke may be due to an intracerebral haemorrhage where a tiny blood vessel within the brain bursts and bleeds, or due to a subarachnoid haemorrhage where a large bulging in the blood vessel wall (an aneurysm) bursts and causes brisk bleeding underneath the brain covering. Subarachnoid haemorrhage often affects younger people whereas intracerebral haemorrhage is commoner in the elderly.
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