Different Strokes for Different Folks: An Adventure in Stroke Recovery
Many younger people (in their 30’s and 40’s) are having strokes and are stuck in a rehabilitation process designed for eighty year olds. I was a dedicated runner and professional outdoor sports enthusiast when I had my stroke at age 47. I had to be creative and forceful in my rehab to take advantage of my youth and strength. I was seriously debilitated (paralyzed from my face to my toes on the left side), but my vision, speech, and cognitive areas (memory, reasoning, geographic orientation) were largely left intact. Exercise was already a daily habit easily replaced by dedicated physical therapy. After the first very hard month in the hospital, I had to push my therapists to give me more than their established routines. I had to insist with my family that I was capable of doing more than the doctors said I could. I took risks that might have proved fatal to an elderly stroke survivor but they enabled me to regain my former life. This is my story, it’s not a model rehab program. It might be just what you have been craving to hear is possible in stroke recovery.
1114020086
Different Strokes for Different Folks: An Adventure in Stroke Recovery
Many younger people (in their 30’s and 40’s) are having strokes and are stuck in a rehabilitation process designed for eighty year olds. I was a dedicated runner and professional outdoor sports enthusiast when I had my stroke at age 47. I had to be creative and forceful in my rehab to take advantage of my youth and strength. I was seriously debilitated (paralyzed from my face to my toes on the left side), but my vision, speech, and cognitive areas (memory, reasoning, geographic orientation) were largely left intact. Exercise was already a daily habit easily replaced by dedicated physical therapy. After the first very hard month in the hospital, I had to push my therapists to give me more than their established routines. I had to insist with my family that I was capable of doing more than the doctors said I could. I took risks that might have proved fatal to an elderly stroke survivor but they enabled me to regain my former life. This is my story, it’s not a model rehab program. It might be just what you have been craving to hear is possible in stroke recovery.
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Different Strokes for Different Folks: An Adventure in Stroke Recovery

Different Strokes for Different Folks: An Adventure in Stroke Recovery

by Amy Finger Ziegler
Different Strokes for Different Folks: An Adventure in Stroke Recovery

Different Strokes for Different Folks: An Adventure in Stroke Recovery

by Amy Finger Ziegler

eBook

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Overview

Many younger people (in their 30’s and 40’s) are having strokes and are stuck in a rehabilitation process designed for eighty year olds. I was a dedicated runner and professional outdoor sports enthusiast when I had my stroke at age 47. I had to be creative and forceful in my rehab to take advantage of my youth and strength. I was seriously debilitated (paralyzed from my face to my toes on the left side), but my vision, speech, and cognitive areas (memory, reasoning, geographic orientation) were largely left intact. Exercise was already a daily habit easily replaced by dedicated physical therapy. After the first very hard month in the hospital, I had to push my therapists to give me more than their established routines. I had to insist with my family that I was capable of doing more than the doctors said I could. I took risks that might have proved fatal to an elderly stroke survivor but they enabled me to regain my former life. This is my story, it’s not a model rehab program. It might be just what you have been craving to hear is possible in stroke recovery.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781475966152
Publisher: iUniverse, Incorporated
Publication date: 12/21/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB
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