The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Lives rebuilt

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- See www.stroke.org.uk/lostforwor­ds. malexander@thecourier.co.uk malexander@thecourier.co.uk

Dundee employment lawyer Simon Allison looks and sounds fit and well when The Courier catches up with him for a coffee in Dundee city centre. But the 41-year-old partner in local law firm Blackadder­s is one of thousands of people living with communicat­ion difficulti­es after a stroke. In January the Wormitrais­ed former Dundee High School pupil and Dundee University law graduate was running in Newport with his friend Graham when he had a stroke out of the blue.

“Graham said to me: ‘Simon you are incoherent. You are not making sense. Your speech is dreadful and your face is totally sunk on one side’,” says Simon, adding that he wasn’t aware of what was happening.

Fortunatel­y, Graham recognised the signs of a stroke and, despite protestati­ons from Simon that he was fine, it was straight to A&E at Ninewells Hospital in Dundee. Hours later, while under observatio­n in hospital and after undergoing a CT scan that identified a tear in the artery beside his brain, Simon had a second massive stroke.

“I was unlucky but, at the same time, I was lucky – I was definitely in the right place at the right time,” he smiles. “I remember nothing about it. My wife Maree was there. She said I kept saying the same thing over and over again.

“They gave me a clot-busting drug immediatel­y. I was out cold for 48 hours but when I woke I couldn’t speak. I couldn’t raise my right arm. I couldn’t recognise my own name. I couldn’t remember anything at all about the previous 48 hours. It was really worrying from my perspectiv­e.”

Luckily for Simon, his recovery was swift and he can now walk normally and is well enough to give presentati­ons at work. After 10 days in Ninewells, he was transferre­d to the Sir George Sharp Unit at Cameron Hospital, near Leven, for occupation­al therapy and speech therapy, which he still receives.

He made a phased return to work after three months and is back doing a 5km Park Run every Saturday.

Yet he knows he has been “incredibly lucky”. Others he has met in the stroke unit, including several people younger than him who didn’t receive urgent attention, remain paralysed.

“People say to me all the time that after a stroke I should be taking it easy,” he says. “But actually, for me, my stroke wasn’t caused by stress – it was caused by a tear in my artery. It was a physical injury, which is unusual to hear. The really frustratin­g thing for me is that I’ll never know how I tore that artery.”

Someone else dealing with the after-effects of a stroke is Perthshire man Brian Raine. The former headmaster of Queen Victoria School (QVS) in Dunblane suffered a stroke while walking down Lochy Brae to the Bridgend newsagents on April 6 2011.

Admitted to PRI as an emergency, where he remained for three weeks, it was confirmed one of the carotid arteries on the left side of the brain was totally blocked and the other was 60%. Unable to speak, write or read, the consultant said it was too dangerous to operate and he is dependent on medication, having been diagnosed as having aphasia. “After six years I have made a tremendous improvemen­t in all areas – especially mobility, through almost daily walks up Kinnoull Hill – although my right foot and hand are still a problem,” he says.

“This means that I drag my right foot somewhat; writing and using the computer are much slower than I would like but my speech is now much better and since embarking on the hyperbaric oxygen treatment in July 2014, my confidence has definitely improved.”

Brian, 71, had to give up rugby but has taken up new opportunit­ies including rejoining Perth Kinnoull Rotary Club. While his aphasic condition holds him back, he battles on – and describes his wife Jean as his “greatest stalwart, companion and therapist throughout”.

A stroke is a brain attack which happens when the blood supply to the brain is cut off. Strokes are caused by a clot or bleeding in the brain. With around 15,000 strokes in Scotland every year and about 121,100 people living with the effects, the Stroke Associatio­n’s Lost for Words campaign aims to raise awareness of the challenges stroke survivors with communicat­ion difficulti­es can face.

Andrea Cail, Director Scotland at the Stroke Associatio­n, says: “After a stroke, around one in three people have difficulty communicat­ing, which can be both terrifying and isolating. But with the right help and support, many stroke survivors are able to find new ways to communicat­e and can rebuild their lives.”

I couldn’t speak. I couldn’t raise my right arm

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 ?? Pictures: Kris Miller. ?? Simon Allison, top, and Brian Raine, above.
Pictures: Kris Miller. Simon Allison, top, and Brian Raine, above.

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