| ▲ | hotpotat 9 days ago | |||||||||||||
Interesting to see all the people in this thread who had a stroke. I had a mild and then moderate cerebellar stroke within a 7 day span about two years ago. I remember being on the stroke neurology floor of the hospital with a lot of bed ridden people who had also suffered them. I know because, within 24 hours, I was doing hourly walking laps with my nurses because I was bored. In other words, I was one of the lucky ones. Within a week I was back at work — not because I felt pressured to by them, they were completely understanding, but because I had no more symptoms that were experienced simply because I was sitting down to work. I also see some advice about listening to your body after the fact, which I fully agree with. In my case, without going into too much detail, the stroke might not have happened if I had listened to my body beforehand, as it was caused by an injury I could have prevented. So if I could give any advice from this place of experience it would be to listen to your body, and try to hear it when your fears and ego are shouting. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | stouset 8 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Stroke survivor here checking in. As I understand it, post-COVID a lot more people are having strokes at younger ages, primarily from PFOs. 10–15% of us are walking around with a small pathway between the atria of our hearts, and if a clot happens to form, it can pop into the other side of your heart and get pumped straight to your brain. I was exceedingly lucky in that it cleared up on its own after about an hour. I was unable to speak and unable to move so much as a finger or toe on the right half of my body. I was completely incapacitated. They had me in the CT when it cleared up, and I immediately was back to my original self with no lasting defects. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | giraffe_lady 8 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||
I know a vascular neurologist who says that the average age of his patients has dropped by nearly a decade in the last five years. Many more "young" (<60) men with minor strokes, and more frequent serious strokes in the 40s for both sexes. He's treated as many under 30 y/o stroke patients in the last two years than he did in the first two decades of his career. He's a few years from retirement and basically completely rattled by this sudden shift. | ||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | zahlman 8 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
> Interesting to see all the people in this thread who had a stroke. Indeed. My first thought was "....just how common is this?" | ||||||||||||||
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