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Stroke

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  • How to Tell If You Have Had a Mild Stroke

    A stroke occurs when your brain tissue is deprived of oxygen due to a lack of blood supply in your brain. Strokes can range from mild to severe. Even if you've suffered a mild stroke, it's...

  • How to Obtain Balance After a Stroke

    A stroke occurs as the result of a blood clot blocking a blood vessel in the brain or a blood vessel that breaks and bleeds into the brain. This traumatic event can cause paralysis, loss of muscle...

  • Nonverbal Language Therapy for Stroke Victims

    Each year over 700,000 people suffer a stroke, according to a 2007 estimate by the American Stroke Association. Aphasia is a disorder that occurs following a stroke and causes an individual to...

  • How to Improve Balance After a Stroke

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, someone in the United States suffers a stroke every 40 seconds. In 2005, roughly 1.1 million stroke survivors reported difficulty...

  • How to Regain Balance After a Stroke

    Every year, nearly 800,000 Americans suffer a stroke--when blood flow to the brain is obstructed, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Brain cells die as a result of the...

  • Financial Help for Stroke Victims

    According to the American Heart Association, roughly 6,500,000 stroke survivors are alive in the United States as of 2009. Unfortunately, many of these survivors suffer from a host of...

  • How to Choose Treatment Options for Shoulder Pain in Stroke Survivors

    Shoulder pain is one of the most common problems faced by stroke victims. If the stroke victim is paralyzed, then chances are that she will experience a shoulder issue. The pain is usually...

  • How to Improve Swallowing Following a Stroke

    According to the American Stroke Association, 65 percent of stroke survivors develop a swallowing disorder called dysphagia. Dysphagia can be very serious. If left untreated it can lead to...

  • How to Recover Speech After a Stroke

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, roughly 795,000 people in the United States have a stroke every year. Of these individuals, many go on to suffer from aphasia, a...

  • How to Speak to a Stroke Patient

    People recovering from a stroke face many challenges, including impaired communication, which is called aphasia. These communication problems can range from mild to severe difficulty speaking,...

  • How to Get Back Your Appetite Back After a Stroke

    A stroke is a medical emergency where blood flow to an area of the brain is lost (either from a clot or a break in the artery), thus cutting off its oxygen supply. The cells die and brain damage...

  • Brain Therapy for Stroke Patients

    Rehabilitation therapy allows stroke victims to regain their independence. A good program can help stroke survivors restore as much of the brain's damaged areas as possible. Strokes affect various...

  • How to Build Muscles After a Stroke

    A stroke is a blood clot that occurs in the brain. The clot blocks blood flow to a portion of the brain, thereby killing the surrounding brain cells. A common side effect of a stroke is paralysis...

  • How to Treat Aggression After a Stroke in a Child

    Strokes can occur in anyone and children are not excluded. Though the chance for having a stroke during childhood is very slim (approximately 6 in every 100,000 children), children who do...

  • How to Treat Nerve Pain After Having a Stroke

    Suffering a stroke can be a life-altering experience. You have to overcome a lot of obstacles and, depending on how bad the stoke was, you might have to relearn how to do common everyday tasks...

  • How to Communicate with Stroke Patients

    A stroke can cause vision issues; paralysis to the left portion of the body; fast, inquisitive behaviors; and memory loss. Due to these limitations, communication with a stroke patient is not...

  • What Are the Symptoms of an Ischemic Stroke?

    Stroke, also referred to as a "brain attack," is a medical emergency, and recognizing its symptoms can reduce potential complications and the risk of death. Fortunately, ischemic stroke is a...

  • How to Prevent Stroke Naturally

    A stroke is also known as a cerebrovascular accident. It occurs when the blood and oxygen supply to the brain is blocked, causing the death of brain cells. This can result in speech impairment and...

  • Yoga & Stroke Recovery

    Current research on the effects of yoga and stroke recovery is sparse. But studies suggest yoga, as a gentle exercise program, can help survivors of stroke recover balance, coordination and...

  • How to Improve Gait After a Stroke

    You recently had a stroke. The doctor gave you what you consider good news--tests indicate that you have suffered little or no mental impairment. However, you are not walking well. You are not...

  • How to Handle a Stroke

    Roughly 6,500,000 stroke survivors are alive today, according to the American Heart Association. Stroke survivors experience a wide range of complications following a stroke. These complications...

  • How to Determine if Someone is Having a Stroke

    Stroke is a serious condition in which arteries supplying blood to the brain are blocked or arteries in the brain burst. Stroke is the third leading cause for death in the United States. Strokes...

  • How to Treat a Stroke Victim

    A stroke is a neurological condition causing disruption to the brain's blood supply. A stroke can occur without warning, and if left untreated, can develop into serious symptoms hours or days...

  • How to recognise if someone is having a Stroke

    What is a Stroke? Every 5 minutes someone in the UK has a stroke. A stroke is a condition where parts of the brain become deprived of blood flow. This can either happen due to the blood vessel...

  • How to Regain Cognitive Function After a Stroke

    A stroke can occur when there is either too little or too much blood in the brain. Complications vary depending on the extent of the damage caused by the stroke, but can include paralysis,...

  • Range of Motion Exercises After a Stroke

    People who suffer from a stroke often lose range of motion in their limbs. This can cause their already damaged limb function to atrophy even further. Doing range of motion exercises after a...

  • How to Reverse Damage From a Stroke

    Reversing damage caused by a stroke requires immediate medical intervention as well as a long-term commitment to physical therapy in order to regain function, mobility and speech. Medical...

  • How to Stimulate the Brain After a Stroke

    According to the American Heart Association, stroke killed more than 143,000 people in 2005, making it the third largest cause of death, behind diseases of the heart and cancer. Nevertheless,...

  • Recovery From Small Stroke

    A small stoke, also called a mini-stroke or a transient ischemic attack (TIA), is caused when there is a clot in the brain that reduces the supply of blood and oxygen. A small stroke is the same...

  • How To Learn To Speak After a Stroke

    According to the American Stroke Association, after a stroke, a patient could suffer from paralysis on the right side of the body, slow behavior, memory loss and problems with speech and language....

  • Exercises for Stroke Paralysis on One Side

    Most stroke survivors develop some form of disability. Some of the more serious problems could include paralysis, rendering the patient with the inability to hold objects, inability to stand or...

  • How to Deal With Stroke Recovery

    A stroke occurs when a blood clot blocks blood flow to the brain. Blood clots begin in arteries, vessels that carry blood from the heart to the body, and those that move blood throughout the body....

  • Equilibrium Exercises & Stroke

    Stroke survivors may be left with permanent damage in the part of the brain that helps them maintain equilibrium, or balance. If your vestibular system is damaged, it can no longer take in data...

  • How to Help With Stroke Rehab

    According to the Mayo Clinic, a stroke can cause a host of problems depending on what part of the brain was affected. These problems can include, paralysis or loss of muscle movement, problems...

  • How to Get Someone Who Had a Stroke to Talk Again

    Stroke is a disease of the arteries that provide blood to the brain. It occurs when a blockage in an artery prevents blood from getting to a part of the brain or when and artery bursts and too...

  • How to Improve the Gait of a Person Who Had a Stroke

    Following a stroke, physical, speech and occupational therapies are normal courses of treatment for helping the patient to regain as much of her previous level of functioning as possible. In...

  • Recovery From Grade 5 Stroke

    Recovering from a severe stroke takes a lot of patience, effort and hard work from both the stroke victim and the caregiver. A severe stroke can leave the patient permanently disabled and unable...

  • How to Help Stroke Patients With Speech at Home

    Approximately 780,000 people experience a new or recurrent stroke every year in the United States, according to the American Heart Association; this amounts to roughly one stroke every 40 seconds....

  • How to Help Stroke Patients With Speech

    According to the National Institutes of Health, a stroke occurs when the blood supply to the brain is interrupted or when a blood vessel bursts in the brain. Among other things, stroke victims...

  • How to Notice a Stroke

    A stroke happens when blood flow to a part of the brain is stopped or when a blood vessel bursts suddenly. This causes some brain cells to die immediately and others to be at risk, which is why...

  • How to Retain the Brain After a Stroke

    The death rate from stroke declined 29.7 percent from 1995 to 2005, according to the American Heart Association. Today, there are roughly 6,500,000 stroke survivors living in the United States....

  • How to Recover Cognitive Skills After a Stroke

    A stroke occurs when there is a problem with the amount of blood that is getting to your brain. This can mean that there is too little blood in the brain (ischemic) or that there is too much blood...

  • Diets to Encourage Brain Function After a Stroke

    A stroke occurs when normal blood flow to the brain is interrupted or lessened, resulting in damage to the brain itself. The prognosis for stroke victims is largely dependent on how quickly they...

  • Intracranial Vascular Disease Symptoms

    According to the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, intracranial vascular disease, more commonly know as cerebrovascular disease, is the leading cause of life-threatening neurological...

  • Exercises to Strengthen the Ankle After a Stroke

    Foot drop is a common condition among victims of stroke and other traumatic brain injuries, and stroke therapy is often tailored to patients' specific challenges in the area of regaining range of...

  • Stroke Recovery Process

    A stroke occurs when the blood supply to the brain is interrupted, either because a blood vessel in the brain is blocked or bursts. There are two main types of strokes, according to the National...

  • Aspirin Treatment for Mini Strokes in Women

    Aspirin is well-known for reducing the risk of death from a suspected heart attack, or myocardial infarction. It is given as soon as a heart attack is suspected. A low dose is also given on a...

  • Help After a Stroke

    A stroke happens when blood is unable to carry essential nutrients and oxygen to the brain. Once brain cells have died, most abilities controlled by particular areas of the brain are lost. ...

  • Risk Behaviors of a Stroke

    A stroke, or an acute cerebrovascular attack, is a medical emergency that can cause permanent neurological damage, complications or death. It is caused by a sudden loss of blood supply to a...

  • Reasons for Tiredness After a Stroke

    According to the National Stroke Association, about 30 percent to 70 percent of stroke survivors complain of excessive tiredness after a stroke. Stroke survivors should remember that tiredness is...

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