How do you detect a silent stroke?

If you have a brain CT scan or anMRI, the image will show white spots or lesions where your brain cells have stopped functioning. That's how doctors will know you've had a silent stroke. Other signs are so subtle that they're often mistaken for signs of aging, like: balance problems.

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How do you tell if you've had a silent stroke?

Silent Stroke Symptoms
  1. Sudden lack of balance.
  2. Temporary loss of basic muscle movement (bladder included)
  3. Slight memory loss.
  4. Sudden changes in mood or personality.
  5. Issues with cognitive skills and ability.

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What happens when you have a silent stroke?

Silent Doesn't Mean Harmless

Once you suffer from a silent stroke, your chances of suffering from more strokes in the future increase. The damage caused to the brain can result in significant cognitive decline or even death. It may also lead to vascular dementia.

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Will a silent stroke show up on a CT scan?

During a silent stroke, the interruption in blood flow occurs in part of the brain that doesn't control any vital functions. Although it doesn't cause any obvious symptoms—most people who've had a silent stroke have no idea it occurred—the damage does show up on an MRI or CT scan.

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What can be done for silent strokes?

If a person has a brain scan and their doctor detects one or multiple silent strokes, they may prescribe medications. For instance, blood thinning medications can help to lower blood pressure, and cholesterol medications can help to lower low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol.

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Knowing the signs of a silent stroke

25 related questions found

Are silent strokes serious?

The bottom line. A silent stroke has no noticeable symptoms, but it can still do damage to your brain. Like regular ischemic strokes, silent strokes happen when the blood supply gets cut off to a small area in the brain, damaging the brain cells.

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What are pre stroke symptoms?

Sudden confusion, trouble speaking, or difficulty understanding speech. Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes. Sudden trouble walking, dizziness, loss of balance, or lack of coordination. Sudden severe headache with no known cause.

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How common is silent stroke?

Silent strokes are much more common than strokes that cause classic symptoms such as face drooping, arm weakness and speech difficulty and affect nearly 800,000 Americans each year. According to the statement, one in four people over 80 have one or more silent strokes.

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Can you have a silent stroke and not know it?

A silent stroke is most often caused by reduced blood flow in one of the smaller arteries that feed the brain. It can occur without noticeable symptoms if it affects a part of the brain that doesn't control major movements or vital functions.

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Can doctors tell if you had a stroke in the past?

Usually, a silent stroke is discovered unexpectedly on a brain CT or brain MRI. These imaging tests can easily distinguish past strokes from recent strokes.

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How can I test myself for a stroke?

What are the signs of a stroke?
  1. Weakness or numbness in the face, arm or leg, usually on just one side.
  2. Difficulty speaking or understanding language.
  3. Decreased or blurred vision in one or both eyes.
  4. Unexplained loss of balance or dizziness.
  5. Severe headache with no known cause.

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What are the 5 warning signs of a mini stroke?

Warning Signs of Stroke
  • Weakness or numbness of the face, arm or leg, usually on one side of the body.
  • Trouble speaking or understanding.
  • Problems with vision, such as dimness or loss of vision in one or both eyes.
  • Dizziness or problems with balance or coordination.
  • Problems with movement or walking.
  • Fainting or seizure.

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Can stress cause silent strokes?

It's known that stress from work is bad for your health, including causing an increase in your risk for cardiovascular disease, particularly high blood pressure and heart disease. If you've wondered specifically if stress can cause a stroke, too, the answer is unfortunately, yes.

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What does a stroke feel like in your head?

In addition to the classic stroke symptoms associated with the FAST acronym, around 7-65% of people undergoing a stroke will experience some form of a headache. People describe a stroke-related headache as a very severe headache that comes on within seconds or minutes.

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Can drinking water help prevent a stroke?

Drink a lot of water: You should drink at least five glasses of water per day, and this will reduce your risk of stroke by 53%, according to a recent study by Loma Linda University.

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Can a blood test show a mini stroke?

Blood tests for stroke. There is no blood test that can diagnose a stroke. However, in the hospital, your doctor or nurse may do a series of blood tests to learn the cause of your stroke symptoms: Complete blood count (CBC).

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What causes stroke like symptoms but is not a stroke?

One of the most common stroke mimics is a seizure, which researchers believe account for as many as 20% of all stroke mimics. Other common stroke mimics include migraines, syncope, sepsis, brain tumor and metabolic derangement (low sodium or low blood sugar).

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What are the 4 signs of an impending stroke?

Symptoms include:

One-sided arm or leg weakness. Slurred speech or dysarthria. Double vision or other vision problems. A headache.

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How long does your body warn you before a stroke?

Warning signs of an ischemic stroke may be evident as early as seven days before an attack and require urgent treatment to prevent serious damage to the brain, according to a study of stroke patients published in the March 8, 2005 issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

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What time of day do strokes usually occur?

This meta-analysis of 11 816 strokes provides strong evidence that the onset of stroke symptoms has a circadian variation, with a higher risk in the early morning hours (6 am to noon), and lower risk during the nighttime period (midnight to 6 am).

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What happens if a stroke goes untreated for days?

The longer a stroke goes untreated, the more damage can be done — possibly permanently — to the brain. “If you suspect you or someone you're with is having a stroke, don't hesitate to call 911,” Dr. Humbert says. “It could save a life.”

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What is the difference between a silent stroke and a TIA?

A silent stroke differs from a transient ischemic attack (TIA). In TIA symptoms of stroke are exhibited which may last from a few minutes to 24 hours before resolving. A TIA is a risk factor for having a major stroke and subsequent silent strokes in the future.

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Am I having a stroke or anxiety?

Rapid/Gradual Both panic attacks and strokes can come on somewhat rapidly, but strokes are almost always instant, while a panic attack generally peaks around 10 minutes in and then slowly fades. With a mini-stroke, the symptoms occur almost immediately. Any anxiety tends to come after.

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Can silent strokes cause dementia?

But some strokes don't cause any noticeable symptoms. These silent strokes still increase dementia risk. With both silent and apparent strokes, the risk of vascular dementia increases with the number of strokes that occur over time. One type of vascular dementia involving many strokes is called multi-infarct dementia.

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What triggers a stroke?

There are two main causes of stroke: a blocked artery (ischemic stroke) or leaking or bursting of a blood vessel (hemorrhagic stroke). Some people may have only a temporary disruption of blood flow to the brain, known as a transient ischemic attack (TIA), that doesn't cause lasting symptoms.

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