Vancouver Sun

Stroke affects women more severely than men

More die and fewer are likely to recover independen­ce fully, according to report

- SHERYL UBELACKER

TORONTO A little more than a year ago, Julie Tomaino had a stroke that affected both sides of her brain, leaving her “locked in” — conscious but unable to speak or move for about 10 days.

The former profession­al dancer who works in theatre directing and choreograp­hing plays was just 38 years old. “I couldn’t respond to anything and I could just move my eyeballs,” the Toronto resident recalled from Vancouver Island, where she is in rehearsals for a production of the musical Grease.

Tomaino had been having daily headaches for the previous two weeks and knew there was something seriously wrong. But after being checked earlier that day at the hospital, doctors had sent her home with a diagnosis of migraine and anxiety.

That evening, she started vomiting uncontroll­ably and began experienci­ng double-vision. Her husband called an ambulance and she remembers being put into the vehicle. “And then, it’s all black for 12 hours.”

Tomaino had suffered a major stroke, the result of the inner carotid arteries on both sides of her neck dissecting, or tearing, which caused blood to pool in the vessels and send clots to her brain.

While stroke at her age isn’t all that common — the average female victim is close to four decades older — her story illustrate­s a message the Heart and Stroke Foundation is trying to bring to public awareness with a report released Tuesday showing how stroke can affect women differentl­y than men.

“A lot of women don’t realize that they’re susceptibl­e, they tend to focus on cancer, breast cancer and other diseases,” said Patrice Lindsay, director of stroke for the foundation.

As the report outlines, one-third more women die from having a stroke than do their male counterpar­ts, and women are 60 per cent less likely to regain their independen­ce afterwards, with a worse prognosis for recovery than men. Less than half of stroke patients who participat­e in rehabilita­tion programs are female. Women are also less likely to return home after being treated: twice as many women as men go into long-term care following a stroke.

Elderly women have the highest rate of stroke, with the risk increasing gradually after menopause;

pregnant women have a slightly higher risk of suffering a stroke than non-pregnant women of child-bearing age, in particular if they experience elevated blood pressure or gestationa­l diabetes.

In fact, high blood pressure is a prime risk factor for stroke in both adult women and men, as are diabetes and smoking. “Women are more likely to have high blood pressure and women are more likely to have an irregular heart beat, a condition known as atrial fibrillati­on,” said Lindsay. Atrial fibrillati­on can lead to blood pooling inside a chamber of the heart, allowing clots to form and travel to

the brain, where they block blood vessels and cause a stroke.

Women who have had a stroke, especially later in life, may be widowed or living alone and often don’t have family support at home to help them recover, whereas the average male stroke victim is about five years younger and often has a spouse to help them regain physical function to a greater degree.

Tomaino, who spent almost four weeks in hospital, then six weeks in a rehab hospital, followed by a total of 11 weeks doing rehabilita­tion as an outpatient, said she is physically recovered except for numbness in one finger and in an area on one side of her chest.

The speech centre of her brain was severely affected, and that presented a major challenge, she said.

“I have worked hard at getting it back, but there’s just sometimes when I’m tired that I have trouble wrapping my mouth around the words.” Her message to other women, based on her experience of a delayed diagnosis: “When you think you have a serious problem, advocate for yourself.”

 ??  ?? Julie Tomaino
Julie Tomaino

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