Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage is the second most common subtype of stroke and is a significant cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Trigger factors that “accelerate” disease onset may include hypertension, excessive alcohol consumption, constant smoking, hypocholesterolemia, medications, male sex, advanced age, living in an underdeveloped country, ethnicity, chronic kidney disease, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and microhemorrhages.
Therapeutic solutions for spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage aimed at stopping the progression of hemorrhage, reducing the clot volume of intraventricular and parenchymal hematoma, combating perihematomal edema and inflammation, rapidly reducing blood pressure, and providing hemostatic therapy with transfusion of platelets and other coagulation complexes.
Clinical trials on minimally invasive methods of surgical evacuation (endoscopic surgery, stereotactic aspiration, and invasive craniopuncture) are ongoing and may provide positive results because of the shorter operation time and use of local anesthesia. Minimally invasive surgery methods can theoretically improve the outcomes of open surgery by reducing damage to collateral tissues and reducing anesthesia time; however, they cannot be a full-fledged alternative.