June 12, 2026
A stroke is a medical emergency. It happens when blood flow to a part of the brain is blocked or when a blood vessel in the brain bursts. Without quick treatment, brain cells can get damaged, leading to disability or life-threatening complications.
The first few hours after stroke symptoms begin are extremely important. The faster the patient reaches emergency care, the better the chances of reducing brain damage and improving recovery.
SSB Hospital’s Neurology Department in Faridabad provides advanced neurological care, neuroimaging, stroke management, and 24×7 stroke care facilities. The hospital’s Neurology page mentions MRI, CT, stroke management, thrombolysis, and 24×7 stroke management support.
Stroke symptoms usually appear suddenly. The CDC lists major stroke signs such as sudden numbness or weakness of the face, arm, or leg, sudden confusion, trouble speaking, difficulty understanding speech, vision problems, dizziness, balance issues, and sudden severe headache.
A simple way to remember stroke symptoms is BE FAST.
Sudden loss of balance, dizziness, or trouble walking may be a warning sign.
Sudden blurred vision, double vision, or loss of vision in one or both eyes can occur.
Ask the person to smile. If one side of the face droops or feels numb, it may indicate stroke.
Ask the person to raise both arms. If one arm drifts downward or feels weak, it may be a sign.
Speech may become slurred, unclear, or difficult to understand.
Call emergency services immediately. Do not wait for symptoms to improve.
The American Stroke Association also recommends using BE FAST to identify signs such as balance loss, eye changes, face drooping, arm weakness, speech difficulty, and time to call emergency help.
Do not drive the patient yourself if emergency medical support is available. Emergency care can begin as soon as trained medical help arrives. CDC states that stroke treatment begins when emergency medical services arrive and take the patient to the hospital.
Doctors need to know when symptoms first appeared. This helps determine treatment options.
Help the patient lie down safely. Keep the head slightly elevated if comfortable.
Stroke can affect swallowing. Giving food, water, or medicine without medical advice may increase risk.
Sometimes stroke symptoms improve temporarily. This may still be a warning sign of a transient ischemic attack, also called a mini-stroke. It still needs urgent evaluation.
If possible, carry information about medicines, diabetes, blood pressure, heart disease, previous stroke, allergies, or blood thinners.
During a stroke, fast diagnosis and treatment can help reduce brain damage and improve recovery chances. Some treatments are time-sensitive, which is why delay can reduce treatment options.
SSB’s existing stroke blog also highlights that quick treatment can save brain cells, improve recovery chances, reduce disability risk, and increase survival rates.
This happens when a blood clot blocks blood flow to the brain. It is the more common type of stroke.
This occurs when a blood vessel in the brain bursts and causes bleeding.
A TIA or mini-stroke causes temporary symptoms. Even if symptoms disappear, it is a warning sign and needs urgent medical evaluation.
Stroke risk is higher in people with:
SSB’s stroke content also lists high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, heart disease, smoking, alcohol use, sedentary lifestyle, family history, and age above 55 as stroke risk factors.
Doctors may recommend:
The goal is to identify whether the stroke is due to a clot or bleeding, because treatment differs.
Treatment depends on the type of stroke, time since symptoms started, age, risk factors, and overall condition.
Treatment may include:
SSB’s Neurology Department page mentions stroke management, thrombolysis, advanced neuroimaging, and rehabilitation treatments for neurological conditions.
You can reduce stroke risk by:
Consult a neurologist if you or a family member has:
Use the BE FAST method: Balance, Eyes, Face, Arms, Speech, and Time to call emergency help.
Sometimes symptoms may disappear, but this can be a mini-stroke or TIA. It still needs urgent medical evaluation.
Do not give food, water, or medicines without medical advice. Do not wait to see if symptoms improve. Seek emergency care immediately.
A neurologist treats stroke along with emergency care specialists, radiologists, intensivists, physiotherapists, and rehabilitation experts.
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