what causes brain swelling in adults
Brain swelling in adults, also called cerebral edema , is usually caused by something that injures the brain or disrupts fluid balance, such as trauma, stroke, infection, a tumor, low sodium, or other metabolic problems. It can become dangerous quickly because the skull has very little extra space, so swelling can raise pressure inside the head and reduce blood flow to brain tissue.
Common causes
| Cause | How it leads to swelling |
|---|---|
| Head injury | Damages brain tissue and the blood-brain barrier, allowing fluid to build up |
| Stroke | Reduced blood flow or bleeding can trigger brain cell injury and swelling |
| Brain tumor | Can press on tissue and disturb normal fluid movement |
| Infection | Meningitis, encephalitis, or an abscess can cause inflammation and swelling |
| Low sodium or other metabolic problems | Can shift water into brain cells and cause edema |
| High blood pressure emergencies | Can injure small brain vessels and contribute to swelling |
Other adult causes
Other recognized causes include hepatic encephalopathy, radiation-related brain injury, obstructive hydrocephalus, carbon monoxide poisoning, lead poisoning, high-altitude cerebral edema, and some inflammatory or autoimmune brain conditions. In some cases, swelling is part of a broader condition like posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome or follows surgery or a brain hemorrhage.
Warning signs
Brain swelling can cause headache, nausea, vomiting, confusion, drowsiness, seizures, weakness, vision changes, or loss of consciousness. Sudden severe symptoms after a head injury, stroke symptoms, or any rapid worsening mental status should be treated as an emergency because severe swelling can be life- threatening.
What matters most
The exact cause depends on the context, but the big categories are trauma, vascular problems, infection, tumor, and metabolic/toxic causes. Doctors usually confirm the cause with an exam and brain imaging, because treatment depends on whether the swelling came from bleeding, infection, low sodium, or something else.
If you want, I can also give you a simple list of the most urgent symptoms that mean “go to the ER now.”