Stroke Facts

Stroke Facts That You Need to Know

•           Facts about stroke can be found in many places on-line, including the office of the CDC website, as well as multiple hospital websites, and sites for stroke survivor support groups.

•           Strokes are one of the most serious causes of permanent brain damage, even though they sometimes go undiagnosed for weeks or months.

•           Most people don't know that, in a list of stroke facts, there are two types or colors of strokes, named as they are by the cause of each particular stroke.

•           A “red stroke” means that a blood vessel has broken open or burst, letting blood out into the other areas of the brain, where blood does not normally flow.

•           A “white stroke” means that somewhere a blood passage was blocked in the brain, and the surrounding area did not get oxygen or nutrition, and died as a result.

•           After you have a stroke, facts disclose that the parts of the brain that have died disconnect from the rest of your brain and move towards an area of unused brain cells.

•           One-third of people who have strokes usually die; the other two-thirds are left with serious problems resulting from slowed or stopped communication within the brain during the stroke.

•           A stroke can affect your sight, your speech or a number of different areas, and in addition, even if you are not immediately at risk for death, you may generally suffer from depression and confusion, and hopelessness.

•           While you recover from a stroke, you may be confused and determined that you will never get any better. That is actually the most important time to take heart and keep to your rehabilitation schedule, or you may suffer even more serious brain damage.

•           Everyone recovers from a stroke at their own speed. Your own recovery should not be measured against anyone else's, because each case is unique, and each body responds differently to medication and rehabilitation.

•           Stroke facts also bear out that the amount you improve is directly proportionate to the amount of effort you apply in your rehabilitation.

•           Focus on what you still can do, not on what you can't do. The more strongly you strive to get abilities back, the more likely it is that you will recover more of what you initially lost.

•           A positive attitude is as important for you now as any medication or rehabilitation. The more positively focused you stay, the better the chance of a more full recovery.

•           The length of time it takes to recover from a stroke varies immensely depending on the individual involved. According to stroke facts, your recovery will occur at its own speed, not on any schedule. Stay positive and follow your rehabilitation and medication schedule religiously. Think positive and your chances will be greatly improved for a more full recovery.


 

 

 


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