Frank

Frank lost his speech and use of one arm at the end of a long-haul flight. He was told he had a hole in his heart which may have contributed to the TIA, but he has decided not to have an operation to repair it.

Frank was coming home on a long-haul flight one weekend in 2009 when he realised he had lost the use of one arm and could not talk. A colleague who was also on the plane felt Frank needed medical attention, and so alerted the authorities at Heathrow. Frank was reluctant to go to hospital as he just wanted to get home, but the police were called and insisted he should be taken to hospital. The hospital told him he had had a stroke or TIA, but he discharged himself. His wife came to pick him up to take him home. By this time his arm had recovered, and his speech improved as the day wore on. By the evening he felt well enough to go out to dinner with friends.

He booked an appointment with the GP on Monday and was immediately referred to a research clinic at a specialist hospital and attended the same week. One of the tests they performed was a bubble echocardiogram, in which a bubble of saline is injected into a vein in the arm so the staff performing the echocardiogram can track the progress of the bubble through the circulatory system. This showed that Frank has a previously undiagnosed hole in the heart, which is thought to affect up to 25% of the population. It can be linked to TIA and stroke, and also to migraine. He was offered an operation to close the hole, but having looked at the available evidence from studies, particularly in the US, has decided he does not want to go ahead.

Frank has had no further symptoms since the first incident, though he feels even now, six months on, that his speech has not entirely returned to normal. He was in theory retired before he had the TIA, but in fact was still doing a lot, and had just been to a stressful international conference at the time it happened. He has since tried to cut back how much work and travelling he takes on, and continues to take the medication he was prescribed, from which he has few side effects.

He is pleased to have been treated in a research clinic and feels the care has been very good, but he would like to know more information about what the research is trying to uncover and how his personal data will be used. Sometimes he felt there was not enough time to sit and discuss things because staff are so busy, especially those not involved in the research project.

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