Getting out of bed that Saturday morning in July, I collapsed on the floor and couldn’t get up,” remembers Furlong resident Thomas Blackburn. “My left side was completely paralyzed. I kept telling my wife not to call an ambulance, but I’m a big man and she couldn’t move me. Clearly we needed help.” Tom’s wife had sound instincts. She summoned medical assistance despite her husband’s protests.
Tom is one of 700,000 Americans to suffer a stroke in 2006. Striking someone in the United States every 45 seconds, stroke is a thief that silently steals away independence and mobility. Often painless, stroke signs prompt many to blame a numb arm on stress, dizziness on sports injuries, or trouble speaking on fatigue. According to the National Stroke Association, sufferers typically wait 12 to 24 hours before seeking help – a costly delay that limits treatment options and compromises recovery.
Brain Attacks: Just as Urgent
as Heart Attacks
Sometimes called “brain attacks,” strokes occur
when a clot blocks blood flow to an area of the
brain or when a blood vessel ruptures and leaks
blood into surrounding brain tissue. As brain cells
begin to die from lack of oxygen,
they no longer govern body functions
correctly.
The severity of a stroke varies from person to person. A major stroke in the brain stem, which controls basic functions like breathing, may be deadly. Small strokes elsewhere in the brain may trigger only slight arm or leg weakness. TIAs, or transient ischemic attacks, interrupt blood flow only briefly, causing fleeting symptoms and leaving no lingering effects.
About two-thirds of stroke sufferers have lasting disabilities. Strokes affecting the right brain hemisphere often cause movement difficulties on the body’s left side, memory problems, and difficulty judging size, distance, speed, position, or how parts connect to a whole. Left hemisphere strokes often leave behind speech and language troubles, memory deficits. and problems moving the body’s right side. With both right and left hemisphere strokes, people may have difficulty seeing, swallowing, communicating, and performing everyday tasks like feeding themselves, bathing, dressing, and working. Depression and personality changes are also frequent side effects.
Are You a Risk Taker?
Strokes can affect anyone, even children – though this
is an exceedingly rare event usually triggered by existing
health problems. Most strike older adults who are
at risk for the disorder. In Tom’s case, a three-packa-
day smoking habit compromised his circulatory
health, as did a diet laden with fats. “I liked the fat on
my steak too much,” Tom admits.
Regular medical care and lifestyle changes lessen some stroke risks. “Reducing high blood pressure and high cholesterol with medication and diet helps lower risk,” explains Doylestown Hospital neurologist Roy Jackel, MD. ”Diabetes also increases the likelihood of a stroke, so managing the disease carefully is essential.” Obesity, excessive alcohol use, and physical inactivity also predispose a person to the disorder, so losing weight, kicking bad habits, and getting more exercise comprises a three-pronged insurance plan against stroke.
Unfortunately, we can’t change other risk factors. Men who are over 55 and of African-American, Hispanic or Asian/Pacific descent have an increased stroke risk, as do those men and women with a family or personal history of the disorder.
Time is Brain: Faster Help
Saves More Brain Cells
For the 500,000 who suffer first
strokes and the 200,000 who
have recurrent strokes annually,
innovative treatments offer hope.
Doylestown Hospital administers
one of the most promising: t-PA,
also known as a “clot-busting”
medication. For qualifying patients,
t-PA breaks up clots within the
brain and can produce rapid and
significant improvements. The
potential benefits t-PA offers are
extra reasons for quick medical
attention: it’s only effective within
three hours of stroke onset, and
some studies suggest that the earlier
the drug is given, the greater
the potential benefit.
The drug doesn’t help everyone – some patients don’t respond and others can’t have it at all. “Physicians evaluate patients carefully to see what type of stroke they are experiencing,” Jackel explains. “Clot-busting drugs help those whose strokes are caused by clots, but harm those with hemorrhagic strokes – the ones caused by ruptured blood vessels.”
Other treatments dot the research horizon. Some institutions are testing tools that physically retrieve clots and others are treating hemorrhagic strokes with hemophilia medications. Doylestown Hospital recently assessed a medication that may protect brain cells near the stroke area. They also are starting to evaluate a t-PAtype drug that may expand the treatment window from three to six hours.
Getting Back on Your Feet
Stroke treatment extends far beyond emergency room
doors. “Rehabilitation begins as
soon as we admit a stroke patient
from the emergency department,”
explains Doylestown Hospital
rehab director Thea Semanoff, MD.
Physical and occupational
therapists position the patient to
maintain mobility in affected
limbs and initiate early mobility.
Speech therapists assess factors
such as the patient’s ability to communicate,
a critical skill since
rehabilitation relies on teaching.
They also evaluate swallowing
problems – a common stroke side
effect – with a state-of-the-art video
imaging system. Physiatrists and
social service specialists lay the
groundwork for appropriate rehab
placement or a productive return
home. Throughout the entire
recovery process, the medical team
involves the patient’s most powerful
healing resource: the family.
As patients graduate from institutional care, they enter comprehensive outpatient brain injury programs with physical and occupational therapy three to five times weekly for up to four hours at a time. During these sessions, Doylestown Hospital therapists incorporate cutting-edge rehabilitation techniques, including one called “vital stimulation.” Using electrical signals, this process can enhance swallowing or promote function in upper extremities. It helped Tom Blackburn get his smile back. “Before vital stim, I felt like half my face was on the floor and I was kicking it along in front of me,” Tom describes. “Vital stim returned movement and feeling.”
Researchers across the country are testing novel rehabilitation methods. For example, several studies have suggested that restraining a patient’s unaffected arm prompts the affected arm to regain function.
Doylestown Hospital:
the “Go To” Stroke Resource
Tom anticipates driving again
when his vision improves. As a
head plant mechanic accustomed
to a 70-hour work week,
he itches to return to the job. For
now, he focuses on positives like
the patient, competent staff he
encountered in the hospital’s
emergency department, during
his hospital stay, and through
continuing outpatient rehabilitation.
“When they work with me, I
feel like I’m the only person in the
world,” he says. “They take time
and devote all their attention to
me and my needs. I can’t say enough about how much
they have done for me.”
Dr. Roy Jackel is with the Neurologic Group of Bucks and Montgomery Counties. Dr. Thea Semanoff is with Doylestown-Buxmont Rehab.





