Stroke symptoms are quite different from those of heart attacks. Stroke symptoms often occur within fifteen minutes to one hour of a stroke or when you are under anesthesia. Some people also experience weakness, dizziness, sweating, choking feeling, ringing in the ears and ringing in the head after a stroke. If you have any of these symptoms after a stroke you must get emergency treatment immediately. Stroke symptoms often mimic those of serious heart attacks, so it is important that you seek medical attention as soon as possible.
You need to be aware of warning signs of stroke so that you can identify them and get help. Stroke symptoms may occur suddenly or over a period of time. They may happen suddenly in the middle of the night, for example. Or, they may happen suddenly while driving or during or just before climbing a set of stairs. Here we look at some of the warning signs that occur suddenly.
* Transient Ischemic Attack: A small but sudden drop in blood pressure that does not go away. * Varied severity of stroke symptoms: Different people have different symptoms, depending on their age, their health, the extent of their injury, and other factors. Some strokes are more severe than others. And some strokes can go on for long periods of time without warning. The most common type of transient ischemic attack is called “Mini-stroke”. In this type, there will usually be no warning signs.
* Temporary Loss of Brain Tissue: The brain’s blood supply is temporarily lost. This causes brain tissue to die. * Symptoms of Brain Failure: Symptoms of brain failure include loss of consciousness, paralysis, and sometimes death. * Prolonged Duration of Symptoms: Symptoms of prolonged stroke often develop slowly over a long period of time. They often do not become apparent for years or decades after a stroke.
* Signs of Stroke: There are many different kinds of symptoms that can occur in the event of a stroke. Some of these warning signs are oculomotor deficits, which are weakness in moving the eyes or extremities, decreased consciousness, decreased sweating and increased body temperature, decreased hearing, decreased balance, difficulty swallowing, speech problems, speech slurring, speech impediment, seizures, hypotonia (lock in), and autonomic deficits. Many of these symptoms can appear simultaneously with one another and are fairly significant. These are also a good indication that a stroke has occurred.
* Temporary Loss of Muscle Function: Some people have lost significant function of the muscles in the neck and arms after suffering a mild transient ischemic attack (tia). * Decreased Consciousness: In some cases, people may cease to know they have had a stroke. * Limiting their movement is common practice for many individuals suffering from a stroke. * Sleepiness: This symptom is one of the most common ones suffered by patients who have had a stroke. * Certain behavioral changes have also been noted such as slowing of thought, slowing of eye movement, irritability, and depression.
* Face Droop: Some individuals suffer from drooping eyelids and a tendency to “face droop” when they are lying in bed. Other symptoms of this condition include snoring very close to the person’s sleeping area. * Fluid on the Right Side of the Body: Some individuals experience a “depression-like” look to the right side of their body. Many individuals have also reported feeling as if there is some fluid coming out of the nose and mouth area.
It is also possible for a person to experience one side of their face droop and then the other side of their face droop. If this happens it is very rare and not considered to be a stroke. These are called mixed strokes. A person may also experience one side of their body experiencing speech problems and the other side not so much.
Oren Zarif – Psychokinesis Treatment