Hemorrhagic strokes include bleeding within the brain (intracerebral hemorrhage) and bleeding between the inner and outer layer of tissue that protects the brain (subarachnoid hemorrhage).
There are two main types of stroke that bleeds: (intracerebral hemorrhage and (subarachnoid hemorrhage. Disorders include other intracranial hemorrhage, including subdural hematomas, and epidural, which is usually caused by a head injury. These disorders cause different symptoms and not considered as a stroke .
Broke and cracked: Causes of Hemorrhagic Stroke
When a weak blood vessel in the brain, abnormal, or under undue pressure, a stroke can happen to bleed. At the stroke bleeds, bleeding can occur in the brain, as an intracerebral hemorrhage. Or bleeding can occur between the inner and middle layers of tissue that protects the brain (the subarachnoid space), as a subarachnoid hemorrhage.