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WINNING AGAINST STROKE
A stroke happens so fast that the victim often recalls nothing about it. The brain simply does not have enough time to store the event in its memory banks. But the stroke’s damage is evident: There may be paralysis on one side of the body. Perhaps there is an inability to speak, indicating brain damage.
A stroke occurs when something shuts off the blood supply to brain cells. Deprived of the blood’s essential oxygen and nutrients, the cells die. The blood supply might be stopped when an artery is clogged by a clot, an air bubble, or solid tissue, or when an artery bursts, releasing blood that pools rather than circulates.
William Wylder, 73, a former radio and TV reporter, said his stroke terrified him. The symptoms he described are fairly typical: “In 1973,” he recalls, “with no warning symptoms before it happened, I had a stroke while I was doing a radio newscast in Rock Island, Illinois. It was the craziest newscast ever. I could not speak. I could not get anyone’s attention. My arms were flailing. I managed to crawl to my car. Somehow, I drove home, and my wife got me to the doctor.”
Each year, 500,000 or more Americans experience strokes. Two-thirds survive, many unable to support themselves or live productive lives. Three million U.S. residents have had at least one stroke, and $30 billion is spent for treatment and care each year.
Persons undergoing coronary bypass surgery also are at risk of stroke. A patient’s heart is slowed for the surgery. Because of this, there is an increased risk of blood clotting, and 5 to 7 percent of bypass surgery patients suffer strokes from clots that form during surgery.
“Of those patients who undergo bypass, 30 percent are not mentally as good as they were before surgery,” says Dr. Denise Barbut, director of the stroke center at New York Hospital in Manhattan. “We are trying to prevent that.”
Despite such grim statistics, progress in medication, technology, and research is brightening the picture.
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