Clare
Clare had a TIA when she was at work one day, an ambulance was called and she was taken to hospital where she stayed in overnight. Her consultant believes it was caused by a trauma to the neck, but Clare is unsure whether this is the case. She felt vulnerable and emotional for some time afterward, and some physical symptoms persisted for a short while but she is now fully recovered.
Clare was at work one morning when she suddenly began to feel odd, almost like she was having an out of body experience. She wasn’t aware that she was behaving differently, but her colleagues noticed that she was slurring her words and not speaking coherently, and her face had dropped and was paralysed on one side for a short while. A nurse who was on site recognised the symptoms as being a possible stroke, and gave her 300mg of Aspirin and called for an ambulance. At the hospital Clare was given a series of tests and told that she had a minor stroke and later the consultant told her that it had probably been caused by a recent trauma to the neck area as the scan had shown damage to the carotid artery. The consultant notes described the cause of the TIA as being due to a biological crash; but Clare finds this frustrating because she is not sure where or how this may have happened. She remembers a few months prior to her stroke having a small accident in the shower where she fell and the shower curtain rail had come down onto her neck and wonders whether that was the catalyst for her subsequent stroke. Since then she has remembered several times when she had unexplained headaches, lost the feeling in her face, or visual disturbances but they had only lasted a short while and at the time she had seen them as being trivial or due to tiredness. Now looking back Clare wonders whether these were in fact warning signs.
Although Clare was diagnosed with a TIA/minor stroke she was surprised and somewhat upset to find that she was left with minor brain damage. She was told that although the symptoms had not lasted longer than 24 hours and she had largely recovered within that time, it was not therefore classed as a Stroke. Clare experienced strong feelings of disbelief that this had happened to her at such a young age as prior to this she would have associated strokes with older people.
Clare remembers feeling frightened at the time she had the TIA, mainly by her colleagues reactions to her – because she wasn’t aware herself of how she looked or sounded. Afterwards, whilst recovering at home she felt fearful about whether it might happen again, and uncertain about her future, and this heightened sense of emotion continued for some time. Although the doctor encouraged her to make lifestyle changes to prevent further possibility of a future stroke or TIA Clare felt sceptical as she felt unclear as to the cause of her stroke and whether lifestyle factors were indicated.
After the TIA Clare remembers feeling very emotional, tearful at times and also very tired. It took some while for her face to look normal again, and she had a slight limp for a while. Clare is still frustrated in thinking about the causes of her TIA and wondering whether the fall in the shower was in fact the trauma that the consultant felt had caused her illness and still feels that she wants a more definitive answer about why she had a minor stroke.