Types of Stroke: The Mechanisms, Causes, and Signs of Onset for Ischemic Stroke (Infarction), Intracerebral Hemorrhage, and Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Stroke is largely categorized into three types: Cerebral Infarction (Ischemic Stroke), Intracerebral Hemorrhage, and Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. Each possesses distinct mechanisms and treatment approaches. While Cerebral Infarction (approx. 70–75%), where a vessel is blocked, is the most common in Japan, Intracerebral Hemorrhage (vessel rupture) and Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (aneurysm rupture) have high fatality rates and are characterized by greater urgency.

Types of Stroke

TypeProportion (Japan)MechanismMain CauseCharacteristic of OnsetSeverity/Mortality Rate
Cerebral Infarction(Ischemic Stroke)70–75%A blood vessel in the brain is blocked, cutting off blood flow.Atherosclerosis, atrial fibrillation, carotid stenosis, etc.Often occurs while sleeping (noticed in the morning).Moderate to Severe
Intracerebral Hemorrhage15–20%A small blood vessel inside the brain ruptures and bleeds.High Blood Pressure (≥90%)Sudden headache “like being hit by a bat” + paralysis during active hours.Very Severe
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage(SAH)5–10%An aneurysm (a sac/bulge) on the brain’s surface ruptures.Aneurysm (congenital or age-related).Sudden “worst headache ever experienced”!Ultra-Severe

Cerebral Infarction is Further Divided into 3 Subtypes (Important!)

SubtypeProportionCause/CharacteristicKey Treatment Point
Cardioembolic Stroke25–30%A blood clot formed in the heart (especially due to atrial fibrillation) travels forcefully to the brain.Sudden onset! Tends to result in a large infarct.
Atherothrombotic Stroke30–40%Atherosclerosis progresses in the large vessels of the neck/brain → a clot forms there and blocks the vessel.Common in middle-aged and elderly individuals.
Lacunar Infarction25–30%Very small vessels deep within the brain become damaged and blocked due to high blood pressure.Infarcts are small, but repeated occurrences lead to dementia.

Quick Comparison Table

FeatureCerebral InfarctionIntracerebral HemorrhageSubarachnoid Hemorrhage
Headache at OnsetInfrequentSevere (30–50%)Ultra-Severe (≥90%)
Decreased Level of ConsciousnessMild to ModerateFrequentVery Frequent
Blood Pressure at OnsetNormal to Slightly HighOften Extremely HighHigh
Time Limit for Treatment4.5–24 hours possiblePrimarily limited to lowering BPSurgery for re-bleeding prevention is the highest priority
Recurrence Prevention DrugAntiplatelets or AnticoagulantsAntihypertensives (BP medication)Surgery (Coiling or Clipping)

Convenient One-Sentence Summary

  • Cerebral Infarction → “A clogging disease” → Arm/leg paralysis noticed in the morning.
  • Intracerebral Hemorrhage → “A rupturing disease” → Severe headache + paralysis during activity.
  • Subarachnoid Hemorrhage → “A bulge-bursting disease” → Thunderclap headache.