Tag Archives: Headache

Main Symptoms of Cerebral Hemorrhage

A cerebral hemorrhage—often called a “bleeding stroke”—happens when a blood vessel in the brain bursts and spills blood into the surrounding tissue. Brain cells are damaged by the pressure of the clot and by the loss of normal blood flow. Symptoms usually start without warning and get worse within minutes to hours. The classic first sign is a sudden, severe headache that most people describe as the worst they have ever felt. Nausea and vomiting often follow. Weakness or numbness on one side of the body is common: the face may droop, the arm may drift downward, or the leg... Learn more

Main Symptoms of Cerebral Infarction

Cerebral infarction is the medical name for what most people call an “ischemic stroke.” It happens when a clot or other blockage shuts off blood flow to part of the brain. The signs can pop up without warning and usually reach their worst within minutes to a few hours. The classic warning is sudden weakness or numbness on one side of the body. One side of the face may droop, the arm may drift downward, or the leg may feel heavy or “dead.” Speech often becomes slurred or garbled; some people can’t find the right words or understand simple sentences.... Learn more

Main Symptoms of Cerebral Thrombosis

Cerebral thrombosis is a type of stroke that happens when a blood clot blocks an artery in the brain. The signs usually start without warning and get worse over minutes to hours. Knowing what to look for can help you act fast and limit brain damage. The most common first clue is sudden numbness or weakness on one side of the body—face, arm, or leg. Your smile may droop, or you may not be able to lift one hand. Speech can become slurred or jumbled; some people lose the ability to speak at all. Vision may blur or disappear in... Learn more

What Are the Symptoms of Subdural Hematoma

Subdural hematoma (SDH) is bleeding between the dura and the arachnoid. Symptoms depend on how fast blood accumulates, the size of the clot, and the patient’s age or brain atrophy. They may appear within minutes (acute), days (sub-acute) or weeks (chronic). HeadachePersistent, often severe and worsening; classically more noticeable on awakening. Nausea and vomitingRaised intracranial pressure triggers frequent vomiting with little relief. Altered consciousnessDrowsiness, lethargy, sudden confusion, or memory loss; a lucid interval may precede deterioration. Focal neurologyWeakness or numbness on the side opposite the bleed, slurred speech, unequal pupils, or vision changes. SeizuresFocal or generalised fits are common when... Learn more