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How to detect a stroke FAST Part 2

how to prevent stroke

how to prevent stroke

Something doesn’t add up about strokes.

They are common. Someone suffers a stroke every 40 seconds, which adds up to nearly 800,000 stroke victims every year.

They are preventable. Up to 80 percent of strokes can be prevented, making it the leading cause of preventable disability.

So how does something we see so often and know we can stop still have such a devastating impact?

We’re not doing enough — or being fast enough — to stop strokes when we spot the signs.

 

By learning and sharing the F.A.S.T. warning signs, you just might save a life from stroke.

How to spot stroke fast

5 Classic Warning Signs of Stroke

If any of these symptoms happen suddenly, you might be witnessing a stroke:

  1. Weakness or numbness in the face, arm or leg, usually on just one side
  2. Difficulty speaking or understanding language
  3. Decreased or blurred vision in one or both eyes
  4. Unexplained loss of balance or dizziness
  5. Severe headache with no known cause

These classic stroke symptoms can last a few minutes. Or a few hours. It could be a single symptom or a combination. It all depends on what part of the brain is without blood and at what point blood flow is restored.

If you have an inability to speak words, notice food or liquid falling out of your mouth due to facial droop, you could be having a stroke. If you experience numbness in your face or extremities, can’t move an arm or leg or have a sudden onset of double vision or dizziness those are other possible stroke symptoms.

 The medical community developed a simple test using the acronym F.A.S.T. to help people remember the most common warning signs of stroke and react accordingly. If you think someone is suffering a stroke, give them this test:

F = Face — Ask the person to smile. Does one side of the face droop? Is the smile uneven? That’s a sign of weakness or numbness in the face.

A = Arms — Ask the person to raise both arms. Does one arm drift downward? Can they lift one arm higher than the other? That signals weakness on one side of their body.

S = Speech — Ask the person to repeat a simple phrase. Did they slur? Did their speech sound strange? Could they even repeat the phrase? Trouble speaking is a tell-tale sign of stroke.

T = Time — If the person failed any part of the test, note the time and get help. Call for help immediately. Let them know what time you gave this test so they can estimate the length of the stroke.

 

What if the symptoms pass?

Just because the symptoms go away doesn’t mean everyone’s in the clear. A stroke of any duration can do lasting damage. Even if you’re wrong, it’s better to be safe and seek treatment than to ignore the warning signs of a potentially deadly event.

And you may be wrong.

What you think is a stroke could actually be a transient ischemic attack (TIA). TIAs are called mini-strokes because they share all the same symptoms as strokes. Symptoms are typically fleeting, lasting as little as one minute. But a mini-stroke can last up to 24 hours.

Initially, you can’t tell the difference between a stroke and a mini-stroke. The only way you can determine that is if symptoms resolve within 24 hours. Otherwise, the presentation is exactly the same.”

Unlike strokes, TIAs don’t kill brain tissue or cause permanent disability. But they’re often a sign of bigger things to come. A third of people who have a mini-stroke go on to have a stroke because the underlying cause is the same. High blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, carotid artery disease — whatever’s limiting blood flow to the brain is still there. By identifying the cause of a mini-stroke, a health professional can help in managing the condition and reducing the risk of a stroke.

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