Don’t Miss Out on the Latest Updates.
Subscribe to Our Newsletter Today!
Stroke patients need not live in vegetative state or suffer from paralysis provided they get proper medical help at the right time. But very few realise the need to rush a patient to a stroke centre within the golden period, said doctors at a one-day workshop organised to create awareness on stroke and after stroke care.
Doctors said that Indian youth were becoming increasingly vulnerable to brain stroke thanks to a poor lifestyle and food habits while extent of awareness about the treatment of the disease was minimal leading to a higher death rate. About 120 stroke patients took part in the workshop. (Read: Stroke a reality check for young India)
Addressing the workshop, Dr Sucheta Mudgerikar, senior consultant neurologist at Apollo Hospitals, said: 'According to a study, over 15 lakh Indians suffer stroke every year and about 30% of them die, while another 30% are left with a disability. In such backdrop, very few people know that one can avoid getting handicapped after getting stroke attack, if he/she is rushed to a stroke centre within three hours of the stroke.'
This time is limit is very crucial for thrombolysis which is the process of dissolving the clot that blocks an artery leading to stroke. In some cases the time limit can be extended to 4.5 to 6 hours after the attack, she added. (Read: Would you recognize a stroke if you saw someone having one?)
What is stroke?
Also known as a cerebrovascular accident, a stroke is a medical emergency in which a part of the brain doesn't receive blood supply. Brain cells of the affected region begin to die within a few minutes and often result in long-term dysfunction of the body part controlled by the affected brain area. There are two main types of strokes Ischemic and Haemorrhagic stroke. An ischemic stroke is caused by a block (blood clot) in the blood vessel and a haemorrhagic stroke is caused by bleeding through a tear in the blood vessel.
Read more about causes, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of stroke.
Risk factors include smoking drinking, drinking, high blood pressure, high blood glucose (diabetes), heart disease, high cholesterol obesity, low HDL and drug abuse.
Signs and symptoms of stroke include numbness, weakness or paralysis on one side of the body. There is sudden confusion, severe headache with no known cause and trouble in speaking, understanding, seeing, walking, dizziness or loss of balance. Stroke is diagnosed by a clinical (neurological) examination and imaging tests such as CT or MRI scans which determine the type and cause of stroke.
Use the handy mnemonic FAST to recognize the symptoms:
F (face): uneven smile, facial droopiness, numbness, vision disturbance
A (arm and leg): weakness, numbness, difficulty walking
S (speech): slurred, inappropriate words, mute
T (time): Realize that time is critical. If you notice any of the above symptoms, immediately call an ambulance studies show that you get faster care if you arrive at the hospital in an ambulance than if someone drives you. With strokes, time lost is brain lost simple as that.
Tips to keep stroke at bay
Get some exercise
Walk at least 20 minutes a day. Even if you break it up into two 10-minute sessions, it's worth it. Walking a total of 2 hours a week can cut your stroke risk by 30 percent, according to a large study of nearly 40,000 women, conducted over a 12-year period. Walk briskly (so you can talk but not sing) and your chances are reduced by almost 40 percent.
Get the right amount of sleep
Set your alarm for 7 hours of sleep. More than 10 a night in la-la land may increase your stroke risk by up to 63 percent, compared with the recommended 7-hour stretch, scientists at Harvard claim. And if you're especially loud in bed while snoring, that is studies suggest you're twice as likely to develop metabolic syndrome, which is a cluster of conditions that raises your risk of stroke, as well as heart disease and diabetes.
Switch to a healthier diet
Healthier food options will help you lower your bad cholesterol levels, keep heart disease at bay and also prevent obesity. Various researches have shown that healthier eating habits have a causal link with less heart disease and stroke risk. Check out our diet section for tasty, healthy recipes.
Mind the migraine
Those extra-special headaches particularly the ones that come with flashes of light and blind spots appear linked to a higher stroke risk in women; and as an added bonus, most migraine-sufferers are women, thanks in part to hormonal fluctuations and medications. Though there's no clear proof that indicates treating a migraine means no stroke, experts agree it's reasonable to try and reduce their frequency. Talk with your doctor she may prescribe preventive meds or suggest stress management techniques.
Don't ignore irregular heartbeats
Pay attention to palpitations especially if the heart flutters occur with shortness of breath, light-headedness, and chest pain those are all signs of atrial fibrillation (AF), an abnormal heartbeat that boosts risk of stroke about five-fold.
Eat potassium-rich food
Eat sweet potatoes and raisins and bananas and tomato paste. Not all on the same plate but individually, each is loaded with potassium and a diet rich in foods with this nutrient may reduce stroke risk by 20 percent, suggests a recent report. More good sources: fruits and veggies, fish, poultry, and dairy.
With inputs from DNA
Top 6 stroke articles
Sex, alcohol and stress things likely to give you a heart attack
Would you recognise the symptoms of stroke if you saw someone having one?
Stroke causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment and prevention
Eight ways to keep stroke at bay
Keep strokes away by switching to olive oil
Recognise symptoms of stroke, prove help in the Golden Hour
For more articles, visit our Diseases and Conditions Section. Health.India.com is now TheHealthSite.com. Follow the all-new site on Facebook and Twitter.