Adrian
Adrian had a TIA earlier this year one evening whilst he was sitting on the sofa. His partner recognised what was happening to him and called for an ambulance. He received medical assistance very soon after the event and was taken to hospital. His symptoms subsided quickly and he has no lasting effects. He is making changes to his lifestyle and hopes that he will be able to prevent the possibility of having a stroke in the future.
Adrian was sitting at home one evening when his partner noticed he was struggling to communicate – she realised that he was experiencing something similar to a stroke because she had remembered seeing the TV advert about how to recognise the symptoms of a stroke (FAST – Face, Arms, Speech, Time). Adrian described feeling very strange – although he could make a noise, he had forgotten how to speak, felt disconnected from normality and unaware of what was happening to him. He also lost the feeling in his right arm intermittently during this time. His partner called for an ambulance very quickly and the paramedics arrived very soon after the event. Adrian recalls feeling very frightened and worried about being unable to communicate. However, by the time the paramedics arrived things were beginning to settle down. Gradually he regained his speech and his arm also began to feel normal once again. The paramedics did an ECG, gave him some oxygen and ran some tests before taking him to the hospital. By the time he arrived at the hospital he felt more or less back to normal and was able to speak again.
Adrian had had a heart attack a few years previously and so was already taking a daily dose of aspirin, but this was increased immediately in order to reduce the likelihood of a further TIA. Adrian was then referred to the local TIA clinic where he had further tests and was given an explanation of the kinds of lifestyle factors that can precipitate a TIA.
He found the TIA experience to be very much more frightening than having a heart attack, because it gave him in an insight into how it could feel to lose the ability to communicate with his loved ones. Adrian feels that if the loss of speech had become a permanent disability it would be something that he would find very difficult to come to terms with, and this gives him the impetus to keep himself healthy. The thing that worried both him and his partner the most was the potential effect that losing the ability to communicate would inevitably have on their relationship together, particularly because they have not been together for very long.
The experience has profoundly influenced the way Adrian feels about his life now. Although it was frightening he feels that it has given him an opportunity to re-evaluate his own priorities in life and make some changes to try to ensure that he avoids the possibility of having a further TIA or full stroke in the future. Adrian now sees his TIA as a wake- up call;, he wants to live a long and healthy life as far as he can, and feels he now has the tools and the knowledge to help him do that. He feels that there is a need for more public awareness of TIA because most people who he has spoken about it with have never heard of it. Adrian has fully recovered and has no lasting physical effects from the TIA.