Peg
Peg had some numbness which she thought at first was a migraine. After 3 days she went to the GP, who said it might be a TIA. She went to hospital for tests and was told it wasn’t a TIA, but she is waiting for an MRI scan to investigate further.
Peg thought she was having a migraine when her nose, mouth, tongue and left arm went numb, because the symptoms were similar to bad migraines she had suffered in the past. This happened on a Monday. The next day she felt better so she didn’t worry about it much, but by Thursday lunchtime she felt worse again so she called her doctor’s surgery. The receptionist said she could not see her own doctor but there was an appointment with the duty doctor at about 4pm. When the doctor saw her, she immediately called an ambulance for Peg to go to hospital because she thought it might be a TIA. Peg says, The doctor told me off for not going earlier;, and she feels perhaps the receptionist should have given her a more urgent appointment.
Peg’s husband was called and they went back home (just round the corner form the surgery) to wait for the ambulance, which arrived about three hours after the GP appointment, at 7pm.
At the hospital Peg had scans and a chest X-ray, and was admitted to the ward at about midnight. The next day she had scans of her blood vessels. By this time her symptoms were clearing up. The doctor came to see her and told her they had established that it wasn’t a TIA, but made an appointment for Peg to come back for an MRI scan and to see a neurologist. At the time of the interview Peg still didn’t know what caused the problem.
Peg thinks it is important that there should be greater awareness of the symptoms of TIA. She delayed seeking help because it seemed very similar to her previous experience of migraines, even though at that point she had not had a migraine for many years. (Once her high blood pressure had been diagnosed and treated the migraines seemed to clear up). The GP asked Peg if she had seen the TV advert about the FAST campaign to diagnose stroke (FAST = Face, Arm, Speech, Time). Peg had seen it, but did not relate it to her own symptoms.