A 55-year-old male with a past medical history significant for anxiety (on fluvoxamine 100 mg daily for the past year), obstructive sleep apnea and intermittent use of pseudoephedrine as needed for congestion (last dose was 5 days prior to admission) presented to our tertiary care emergency department with a thunderclap headache (TCH) and sudden anterograde amnesia. At 7 days prior his admission, the patient was evaluated by his dentist for a toothache that was attributed to a possible infected tooth and was subsequently treated with amoxicillin-clavulanate. Then 3 days later, he presented to an emergency department (ED) with a severe holocranial TCH and was found to be hypertensive. A non-contrast computed tomography (NCCT) of his brain did not show any acute intracranial abnormalities. A CT angiogram (CTA) of the head and neck was also unremarkable. His headache was attributed to elevated blood pressure coupled with his recent history of a toothache and he was discharged from the ED on metoprolol. Despite medical management