lack of response to voice or touch; disorientation or stupor; light-headedness; headache; sleepiness; Not breathing
Nausea, vomiting, headache, and loss of consciousness are symptoms of poison gas exposure. The symptoms can vary depending on the type of poisonous gas and the amount of exposure.
Severe compression injuries affect the brain causing hematomas. Symptoms include loss of smell, double vision, brief loss of consciousness, confusion and loss of motor skills.
Schizophrenia itself does not involve those symptoms, but the medications associated with schizophrenia can cause weakness and loss of consciousness. Please see your doctor immediately if you lose consciousness without any evident non-serious cause.
The primary sign of gas embolism is immediate loss of consciousness; it may or may not be accompanied by convulsions.
Fainting is a brief loss of consciousness that occurs due to a insufficient supply of blood/oxygen to the brain. Symptoms: -Brief loss of consciousness. -May collapse without warning. -Will soon regain consciousness. If this is not brief...call for AMBULANCE!
The symptoms often begin with those of AMS, but neurologic symptoms such as an altered level of consciousness, speech abnormalities, severe headache, loss of coordination, hallucinations, and even seizures.
Increase in confusion, and finally loss of consciousness, coma and death (with high enough CO2 levels).
Symptoms of lobar hemorrhage in CAA include sudden onset of headache, neurologic symptoms such as weakness, sensory loss, visual changes, or speech problems, depending on which lobe is involved; and decreased level of consciousness.
The levels of a concussion are referrred to as Grade 1, Grade 2, and Grade 3. Grade 1: Temporary disorientation, no loss of consciousness, all symptoms clear up in less than 15 minutes. Grade 2: Temporary disorientation, no loss of consciousness, symptoms persist for 15 minutes or more. Grade 3: Any loss of consciousness, whether for seconds or minutes. There's a good article on Concussion Management in Organized Sports that explains more. See http://www.headbraininjuries.com/concussion-management-sports.
Subtle personality changes, inability to concentrate, lethargy, progressive loss of memory and thinking abilities, progressive loss of consciousness, and abnormal involuntary movements.
high levels of ketone and glucose can cause loss of consciousness in dka
The symptoms of a brain tumor are headache or a feeling of pressure in the head, temporary loss of consciousness, confusion or feeling as if in a fog, amnesia, dizziness, ringing in the nauseous or vomiting, and fatigue.