A Month Before a Stroke, Your Body Warns You: 10 Silent Signs Not to Ignore


You’ve heard the phrase: “Time is brain.”
When it comes to stroke, those words are life-or-death truth.
But what if your body starts sending warning signals weeks—even a month—before a major stroke occurs?
Many people assume strokes strike without warning. Yet research shows that up to 1 in 3 strokes are preceded by subtle, overlooked symptoms in the days or weeks prior—especially with Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIAs), often called “mini-strokes.”
These aren’t just “bad days.” They’re urgent red flags.
Here are 10 early warning signs you should never ignore.
⚠️ What Is a Stroke? A Quick Refresher
A stroke happens when blood flow to part of the brain is cut off, starving brain cells of oxygen. There are three main types:
Ischemic Stroke (87% of cases): A clot blocks an artery.
Hemorrhagic Stroke: A blood vessel ruptures, causing bleeding in the brain.
TIA (Transient Ischemic Attack): A temporary blockage that resolves—but is a major warning of a future full stroke.
📌 Critical fact: 1 in 3 people who have a TIA will have a full stroke within a year—often within 48 hours.
🔍 10 Warning Signs That May Appear Days or Weeks Before a Stroke
1. Sudden, Severe Headaches (Especially “Thunderclap” Headaches):





 

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