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What Happens After a Stroke? |
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Home Treatment
After a stroke, home treatment will be an important part of your rehabilitation.
You may need to use assistive devices to help you:
- Eat. Large-handled silverware can be easier to grab and
use if you have a weak hand.
- Get dressed. Devices called reachers can help you put
on socks or stockings if you have weakness in one arm or hand.
- Walk. Canes and walkers can be used to help prevent falls.
Tips for a successful recovery
- Be
as involved as possible in your care. Although you may feel
like letting a caregiver take charge, the more you can participate
the better. Ask for help in dealing with any disabilities you
may have, and try to make people understand your limitations.
- Depression is common after a stroke and can be treated. Recognize
signs of depression and take action to deal with depression.
- Participate in a stroke
rehabilitation program as soon as possible. After a stroke,
a combination of physical, speech and occupational therapies
can help manage the basics of daily living, such as bathing,
dressing and eating. Doctors, a variety
of therapists and nurses will work to help you overcome disabilities,
learn new ways to accomplish tasks and strengthen parts of your
body impaired by the stroke.
Tips for dealing with the effects of a stroke
- Getting
Dressed. Using stocking/sock
spreaders, rings or strings attached to zipper pulls and buttonhooks may
assist in getting dressed each day. Talk with a nurse or physical therapist
about assistive devices that may
be available to help you get dressed.
- Vision
Problems. After a stroke,
some people have problems seeing to one side. For example, people with
right-sided paralysis may have difficulty seeing to the right.
Check with your doctor for vision related assistance problems.
- Eating
Problems. Stroke victims are sometimes unable to feel food on
one or both sides of the mouth, increasing the risk of choking.
Further
tests or an evaluation by a speech therapist may be needed.
- Bowel
and Bladder Problems. About half of people who have a stroke
suffer loss of bladder control, or urinary incontinence, the first week
after the
stroke. However,
this is usually temporary and can have many causes including infection,
constipation and the effects of medications.
Tips for family members and caregivers
- Family
adjustment will be important to your loved one's recovery.
Strong support from the family may greatly enhance recovery.
- Manage
speech and language problems with simple tips. These
problems may involve any or all aspects of language use, such as
speaking,
reading, writing and understanding the spoken word. Speaking slowly
and directly and listening carefully is helpful.
- Rehabilitation
support involves participating in your loved one's rehabilitation
as often as you can. Give as much support and encouragement as possible.
Although stroke rehabilitation is increasingly successful at prolonging life,
a stroke can be a disabling or fatal condition. People who have had a stroke
may consider discussing health care and other legal issues that may arise near
the end of life. Many people find it helpful and comforting to state their
health care choices in writing with a living
will or other advance
directive while they are still able to make and communicate these decisions. |
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