I had a stroke when I was 12 and I remember walking home from school and just collapsing, I couldn’t walk and I couldn’t talk I wasn’t able to move and it was one of the scariest things I’ve ever experienced, thankfully I had collapsed outside a lovely old man’s house and he came out and helped me, he found my mums number and called her (she was at work) who in turn called my aunt to come and pick me up from the street seeing as we lived a few kilometres from each other. I got mobility and speech back and mum came and picked me up from my aunts house, I then had to go to hospital where they just put me in a cold room and gave me Panadol before sending me home, later on I had to get a brain scan and the paediatrician said I’d suffered a juvenile stroke. I’m nearly 30 now
@@kaynemccully5266 health wise I’m doing fine, I sometimes have trouble speaking if I’m talking too quickly but I just have to take a breath and slow down so my brain can catch up. I can walk and talk and resumed a normal life, moved in with my girlfriend and we have a dog together I hope you’re doing well too it’s a scary thing to go through
I had a stroke in my early thirties. It felt like a sudden strange buzzing/pressure in my head and dizziness. Couldn’t think straight. It was all consuming, I couldn’t function at all until that wave passed and then I was just super dizzy and off balance. Any movement had me feeling like I was going to fly off the face of the planet. And then that wave sort of passed (I stayed dizzy and off balance weeks afterwards just not as bad). Then I went to talk to someone and I kept forgetting words. Simply basic everyday words like dog, car, etc. I felt pretty awful so I went upstairs to lay down and get some sleep, thinking I was just over tired. Laid down and felt the WORST headache but the headache would ease if I sat back up. I wasn’t thinking clearly so I just propped myself up on a couple of pillows and went to sleep. I’m extremely lucky I woke back up in the morning.
I had a stroke on June 24, 2023. It was a bad one. I lost my entire right side, including my hearing. I have no movement in my right arm. Still can’t hear out of my right ear. It could be worse. I could have died at 44.
My mom-in-law had a stroke out of nowhere and died. Husband went to check on her when he couldn’t get ahold of her. Found her on the floor with some blood from her mouth. Called 911 but paramedics called it in less than 10 minutes. She’d likely been dead a few hours. I don’t think she had the wherewithal to call 911 or anyone else.
She could have married townsend, given up the royal titles and money, given up heavy drinking and smoking. She did not. She made bad choices and sadly here is the result.
@@peterpanek2926 if what happens to me? Cancer or other issues like Margaret? Of course we all have a chance of getting ill but we can also do more to stay healthy. She smoked and drank heavy and never exercised. So karma has nothing to do with it. Smoking killed her. That was her choice. I read that had she never smoked she would probably have lived much longer so again, we all make choices. She chose her path. Her two strokes were specifically related to her heavy smoking. She had lung surgery in 1985, again, attributable to smoking.
Agreed She chose a life of superficially and ostentation. And that too she kept losing inch by inch as she grew older and got replaced by the younger royalties. Looking back she must have regretted her choices and long string of bad decisions
Margaret smoked too much, that's what cause 4 strokes. Her sister never had strokes even at old age. Joseph Stalin was a chain smoker and drink alcohol. Because of that, he had atherosclerosis and hypertension, he died from a Cerebral haemorrhage at 74. There are only 3 things that can cause strokes: Atherosclerosis, Hypertension and blood clots.
Had a stroke and didn't even realize it. I just woke up got dizzy and my right arm was shaking I couldn't even hold a cup of coffee. I was confused but luckily could still walk and talk. I was texting my husband at the time. He said go to the ER. I had a mini stroke that was effecting the side of my brain that helped control the right side of my body.....IT WAS CRAZY! He said not all strokes cause the classic symptoms
Mi padre sufrió algo parecido pero menos mal fue tratado a tiempo y el derrame no fue tan grave tuvieron q hacerle una trepanación y retirarle un pequeño coágulo q se le había formado
9 February 2023 i was supposed to be at school but was sick so i stayed home ,my mother went to the toilet but then collapsed she had a stroke ..may 2022 she was diagnosed with dementia..she can't drive her car or do many things like she used to and she lost a lot of weight..also dealing with depression and just last Wednesday she lost her older sister my aunt who stayed next to us 😢😢
If your have atherosclerosis, high blood pressure, blood clots. You're likely to get strokes/heart attacks. Woodrow Wilson for example was diagnosed with severe atherosclerosis in 1915. Plus not to mention that Margaret was a smoker, her sister Elizabeth II never had strokes even when she was in her 90s.
I had a mini-stroke back on November 2nd, 2018. I remember talking to a friend in my living room about politics when suddenly I couldn't get my words out. I remember lifting my arms above my head and the just fell slowly, like somebody was gently pulling them down, and I couldn't keep them up no matter how hard I tried. I remember going into a panic whilst this was happening, and my friend called 111. He gave me a glass of water, and that seemed to clear it up. However, shortly after he'd left, it happened again, but worse! I remember managing to call an ambulance, barely able to get the word "stroke" out to the 999 operator. They came and, whilst on their way, my next of kin was called. I remember when the ambulance arrived, along with my next of kin with her husband, they took me into the ambulance to check me over. My next of kin came into the ambulance and the lead crew member said "Do you know the name of this person?" as a test for stroke. I knew who she was but couldn't get her name out. Within a few seconds, it was all over and I could speak and get my arms above my head and keep them there. The crew member took my oxygen levels and said they were normal (at that point). Afterwards, I remember feeling elated yet extremely fatigued as I kept panicking during the mini-stroke thinking I was either going to die or be physically and/or mentally handicapped afterwards, not realising it wasn't a full on stroke.
Common signs of stroke are: sudden piercing headache, unilateral paralasys, or weakness leading to sagging on one side of the face, confusion, struggling to speak or speaking gibberish, slurred speech, often profuse sweatting, colapse, loss of consciousness, discoloration of the face due to lack off bloodflow, confusion, sudden change of mood or demeanor etc.
I think it depends on both the person and the KIND of stroke they suffer. There ARE different kinds you know. For instance, when FDR had the stroke that killed him (his was a cerebral hemorrhage) he simply put his hand to the back of his neck, said 'I have a terrific headache' and collapsed.
I had a cerebral hemorrhage add a very young age. It came on with a sudden headache, that felt like I was shot in the head. Then I was nauseous and vomited then my legs felt like rubber. I wanted to say help, something is wrong with me.... but it came out gibberish.
FDR collapsed and died after saying "I have a terrific headache" The tricky part about hemorrhagic strokes, brain aneurysm is that some folks don't have symptoms, they just lose consciousness.
You mortal animals, you think you can enjoy perpetually, No one is watching?No one to fear ? There is God above us all...Be careful in your desires.......Come to seek my advise.....
I had a mini stroke a few years ago and the part with the sharp pain headache and the confusion and slurred speech is very realistic.
I had a stroke when I was 12 and I remember walking home from school and just collapsing, I couldn’t walk and I couldn’t talk I wasn’t able to move and it was one of the scariest things I’ve ever experienced, thankfully I had collapsed outside a lovely old man’s house and he came out and helped me, he found my mums number and called her (she was at work) who in turn called my aunt to come and pick me up from the street seeing as we lived a few kilometres from each other. I got mobility and speech back and mum came and picked me up from my aunts house, I then had to go to hospital where they just put me in a cold room and gave me Panadol before sending me home, later on I had to get a brain scan and the paediatrician said I’d suffered a juvenile stroke. I’m nearly 30 now
Isn't that rather young to have a stroke?
@@retroguy9494 hence the word juvenile strokes can occur from any age
❤ I had a stroke and a very young age also❤ I hope you're doing well now❤
Liar. Are you shilling for Big Pharma and their vaccines?
@@kaynemccully5266 health wise I’m doing fine, I sometimes have trouble speaking if I’m talking too quickly but I just have to take a breath and slow down so my brain can catch up. I can walk and talk and resumed a normal life, moved in with my girlfriend and we have a dog together
I hope you’re doing well too it’s a scary thing to go through
I had a stroke in my early thirties. It felt like a sudden strange buzzing/pressure in my head and dizziness. Couldn’t think straight. It was all consuming, I couldn’t function at all until that wave passed and then I was just super dizzy and off balance. Any movement had me feeling like I was going to fly off the face of the planet. And then that wave sort of passed (I stayed dizzy and off balance weeks afterwards just not as bad). Then I went to talk to someone and I kept forgetting words. Simply basic everyday words like dog, car, etc. I felt pretty awful so I went upstairs to lay down and get some sleep, thinking I was just over tired. Laid down and felt the WORST headache but the headache would ease if I sat back up. I wasn’t thinking clearly so I just propped myself up on a couple of pillows and went to sleep. I’m extremely lucky I woke back up in the morning.
This is what a stroke looks like. I witnessed my own father have one more than 20 years ago, you never forget.
Frightening, heartbreaking.
She reminds me as my great-grandmother suffered a stroke when she was 90 in 2002
She reminds me of my grandma after she had a stroke!
My mother too. She used to hold her head in the exact same way.
I had a stroke on June 24, 2023. It was a bad one. I lost my entire right side, including my hearing. I have no movement in my right arm. Still can’t hear out of my right ear. It could be worse. I could have died at 44.
My mom-in-law had a stroke out of nowhere and died. Husband went to check on her when he couldn’t get ahold of her. Found her on the floor with some blood from her mouth. Called 911 but paramedics called it in less than 10 minutes. She’d likely been dead a few hours. I don’t think she had the wherewithal to call 911 or anyone else.
She could have married townsend, given up the royal titles and money, given up heavy drinking and smoking. She did not. She made bad choices and sadly here is the result.
Exactly...
If it happens to you what will be reason? Karma?
She had fun
@@peterpanek2926 if what happens to me? Cancer or other issues like Margaret? Of course we all have a chance of getting ill but we can also do more to stay healthy. She smoked and drank heavy and never exercised. So karma has nothing to do with it. Smoking killed her. That was her choice. I read that had she never smoked she would probably have lived much longer so again, we all make choices. She chose her path. Her two strokes were specifically related to her heavy smoking. She had lung surgery in 1985, again, attributable to smoking.
Agreed
She chose a life of superficially and ostentation. And that too she kept losing inch by inch as she grew older and got replaced by the younger royalties.
Looking back she must have regretted her choices and long string of bad decisions
Having had a hemorrhagic stroke 6 years ago, the actor got it right.
Hope your recovery goes well 😊
@@jonathanlandau-litewski7405 thank you
Good to remember that anyone at any age can have a stroke. Also remember the acronym FAST:
F-Face
A-Arms
S-Speech
T-Time
Margaret smoked too much, that's what cause 4 strokes.
Her sister never had strokes even at old age.
Joseph Stalin was a chain smoker and drink alcohol.
Because of that, he had atherosclerosis and hypertension, he died from a Cerebral haemorrhage at 74.
There are only 3 things that can cause strokes: Atherosclerosis, Hypertension and blood clots.
@@Charles8777-od4kj And accidently seeing your parents do the dirty deed and only took less than a minute too.
Had a stroke and didn't even realize it. I just woke up got dizzy and my right arm was shaking I couldn't even hold a cup of coffee. I was confused but luckily could still walk and talk. I was texting my husband at the time. He said go to the ER. I had a mini stroke that was effecting the side of my brain that helped control the right side of my body.....IT WAS CRAZY! He said not all strokes cause the classic symptoms
This terrifies me so much
Mi padre sufrió algo parecido pero menos mal fue tratado a tiempo y el derrame no fue tan grave tuvieron q hacerle una trepanación y retirarle un pequeño coágulo q se le había formado
9 February 2023 i was supposed to be at school but was sick so i stayed home ,my mother went to the toilet but then collapsed she had a stroke ..may 2022 she was diagnosed with dementia..she can't drive her car or do many things like she used to and she lost a lot of weight..also dealing with depression and just last Wednesday she lost her older sister my aunt who stayed next to us 😢😢
I have never had a stoke, and hope never to have one in the future
If your have atherosclerosis, high blood pressure, blood clots. You're likely to get strokes/heart attacks.
Woodrow Wilson for example was diagnosed with severe atherosclerosis in 1915.
Plus not to mention that Margaret was a smoker, her sister Elizabeth II never had strokes even when she was in her 90s.
I had a mini-stroke back on November 2nd, 2018. I remember talking to a friend in my living room about politics when suddenly I couldn't get my words out. I remember lifting my arms above my head and the just fell slowly, like somebody was gently pulling them down, and I couldn't keep them up no matter how hard I tried. I remember going into a panic whilst this was happening, and my friend called 111. He gave me a glass of water, and that seemed to clear it up. However, shortly after he'd left, it happened again, but worse! I remember managing to call an ambulance, barely able to get the word "stroke" out to the 999 operator. They came and, whilst on their way, my next of kin was called. I remember when the ambulance arrived, along with my next of kin with her husband, they took me into the ambulance to check me over. My next of kin came into the ambulance and the lead crew member said "Do you know the name of this person?" as a test for stroke. I knew who she was but couldn't get her name out. Within a few seconds, it was all over and I could speak and get my arms above my head and keep them there. The crew member took my oxygen levels and said they were normal (at that point).
Afterwards, I remember feeling elated yet extremely fatigued as I kept panicking during the mini-stroke thinking I was either going to die or be physically and/or mentally handicapped afterwards, not realising it wasn't a full on stroke.
she destroyed herself
She had fun
At other people's expenses. In a warm eternity for this creature
I was 10 when I watched my Great,-aunt have a stroke. All i know was her speech was incoherent
One spoilt life
I, too, had a stroke. My right side was never the some.
Princess Margarite was drinking alcohol…
Could that have been the cause?
she was a heavy drinker and heavy smoker
does one behave like that when having a stroke? im confused
More or less, yes. This is a bit exaggerated because Margaret was quite drunk when it happened, but otherwise it’s pretty accurate.
Common signs of stroke are: sudden piercing headache, unilateral paralasys, or weakness leading to sagging on one side of the face, confusion, struggling to speak or speaking gibberish, slurred speech, often profuse sweatting, colapse, loss of consciousness, discoloration of the face due to lack off bloodflow, confusion, sudden change of mood or demeanor etc.
@@reniermeyer1866 Frightening!
I think it depends on both the person and the KIND of stroke they suffer. There ARE different kinds you know. For instance, when FDR had the stroke that killed him (his was a cerebral hemorrhage) he simply put his hand to the back of his neck, said 'I have a terrific headache' and collapsed.
I had a cerebral hemorrhage add a very young age. It came on with a sudden headache, that felt like I was shot in the head. Then I was nauseous and vomited then my legs felt like rubber. I wanted to say help, something is wrong with me.... but it came out gibberish.
This is what Arteriosclerosis does.
Oh, I didnt knew that Tora. ¿Do you have a stroke when you were 12 years old?
I thought her first stroke happened during a car accident 😳😱😬
OMG! me muero me pasara eso... La buena vida y la poca vergüenza
Qual o nome da música do inicio?
Se llama “Me Ting is Mine” de Calypso Atrocities
People dont lose consciousness when they get stroke and headache usually comes afterwards. This looks more like epilepsy.
And where did you get your PhD in neurobiology?
@@Rat_Queen86 Im a medical intern in a stroke care department, it has nothing to do with neurobiology.
Hemorrhagic stroke can cause that.
They would simply collapse and died in many occasions
FDR collapsed and died after saying "I have a terrific headache"
The tricky part about hemorrhagic strokes, brain aneurysm is that some folks don't have symptoms, they just lose consciousness.
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Nope
As it would be for anyone in the UK at that time. The NHS was better funded then.
You mortal animals, you think you can enjoy perpetually, No one is watching?No one to fear ? There is God above us all...Be careful in your desires.......Come to seek my advise.....