🔥 1. A Sudden, Explosive Headache – “The Worst Headache of My Life”
This isn’t a migraine.
It’s not tension pain.
It’s a thunderclap headache — a blinding, crushing pain that hits in seconds, like being struck in the head.
Comes out of nowhere
Peaks instantly
Often described as “the worst pain I’ve ever felt”
✅ Action: Call emergency services immediately. This is the #1 sign of a ruptured aneurysm.
🤢 2. Nausea and Vomiting (Without Fever or Stomach Illness)
Sudden nausea or vomiting — especially with a severe headache — is a sign of increased pressure in the brain.
Not related to food
Often follows the headache
May be projectile
⚠️ In older adults, this may be mistaken for vertigo or stomach flu — don’t dismiss it.
👁️ 3. Blurred or Double Vision
An unruptured aneurysm pressing on the optic nerve or eye muscles can cause:
Sudden blurriness
Double vision (diplopia)
Difficulty focusing
💡 Especially concerning if it appears suddenly and doesn’t improve.
👁️ 4. Drooping Eyelid or Dilated Pupil
Aneurysms near the oculomotor nerve (which controls eye movement) can cause:
One eyelid to droop (ptosis)
One pupil to become larger than the other
Eye pain or inability to move the eye normally
✅ Often one-sided — a major neurological red flag.
🧩 5. Confusion, Trouble Thinking, or Mental Fog
Sudden confusion, disorientation, or difficulty forming thoughts can signal bleeding or pressure on the brain.
May seem “out of it”
Slurred speech