A concussion occurs when the head sustains a hard blow and the impact
jars or shakes the brain inside the skull. The rapid movement interrupts the
brain's normal activities. Although there may be cuts or bruises on the head or
face, there may be no other signs of a brain injury.
After a mild concussion, it is not uncommon to have a mild headache
or a general feeling of not being "quite right." These symptoms usually go away
on their own over a few days. Many people have some symptoms for up
to 3 months after a head injury, and a small number of people have symptoms for
as long as a year afterward.
Sometimes, after a concussion you may feel as if
you are not functioning as well as you did before the injury (post-concussive
syndrome). New symptoms may develop, or you may continue to be
bothered by symptoms from the injury, such as:
- Changes in your ability to think, remember, or
solve problems.
- Changes in your ability to
concentrate.
- Headaches.
- Changes in your sleep patterns,
such as the inability to sleep (insomnia) or sleeping all the
time.
- Changes in your personality.
- Lack of interest in
your daily activities.
- Becoming easily angered or anxious for no
apparent reason; feeling like
fighting.
- Changes in your sex drive.
- Loss of
your sense of taste or smell.
- Dizziness, light-headedness, or
unsteadiness that makes it hard to stand or walk (ataxia).
Some of these changes may be related to stress from the events
surrounding the accident that caused the injury. It may take several weeks to
many months for these symptoms to go away on their own. However, these symptoms
may also be signs of a more serious injury or of slow bleeding between the
brain and the covering of the brain (subdural
hematoma).