Man who survived a stroke in his 40s says it was caused by a 'seemingly harmless' turn of the head: 'Awareness is survival'
'I probably wouldn't be here today if my wife hadn't known what was happening right when I collapsed,' Levy says. 'She knew about FAST from her training as a teacher, and she routinely discussed it at home so we were prepared if we suspected a stroke.'
This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Contact a qualified medical professional before engaging in any physical activity, or making any changes to your diet, medication or lifestyle.
This article was originally published in 2024.
Many people aren't as lucky as Levy whose wife knew the critical importance of calling for medical help without delay. In the months after his stroke, he had many conversations with stroke survivors who had brushed off their symptoms and refused offers of medical assistance. Fears of long wait times at the ER even led one victim to ignore their partner's pleas to call 9-1-1.
'You should never fear a wasted trip to the hospital,' says Levy. 'It's better to be safe now than sorry later. With something as irreversible as a stroke, you don't want to take that risk.'
June is Stroke Awareness Month in Canada. Stroke is a leading cause of adult disability in Canada, with one stroke occurring roughly every five minutes. According to the Heart & Stroke Foundation, approximately one million Canadians are living with stroke, with 108,000 strokes occurring each year. Knowing the signs of stroke can help increase your chances of a better recovery and even save your or someone else's life.
Heart & Stroke launched its FAST campaign in 2014 to provide people with a simple tool for recognizing the most common signs of stroke:
Face – is it drooping?
Arms – can you raise both?
Speech – Is it slurred or jumbled?
Time to call 9-1-1 right away.
Since the introduction of FAST 10 years ago, awareness has greatly increased, with a 2024 showing the number of Canadians who can name at least two FAST signs of stroke has doubled. However, new data reveals that only seven out of 10 Canadians know what a stroke can look like.
According to Katie White, director of health systems at Heart & Stroke, reducing the time between the onset of stroke and arrival at a hospital can mean the difference between life and death, and also lower the chance of a lifelong disability.
'Anyone witnessing or experiencing the signs of stroke should call 9-1-1 or local emergency medical services (EMS) right away,' White tells Yahoo Canada. 'Lifesaving treatment begins the second you make that call."
While awareness of FAST has increased, there are still gaps, with Heart and Stroke's poll showing disparities depending on gender, age, place of birth and race or ethnicity.
"Many ethnically diverse communities are less likely to be familiar with the FAST signs of stroke," says White. 'We don't know for sure why these differences exist, but we're exploring targeted strategies to address these inequities.' This includes translating FAST materials into multiple languages and developing toolkits specifically for First Nations communities.
The poll also showed that older Canadians are more familiar with the signs of stroke and more likely to take action, perhaps due to the belief that only older adults can be affected by stroke.
As a stroke survivor in his 40s, Levy is no stranger to this misconception.
'At least one member of my medical team said she was surprised to see someone so young and healthy present as a stroke victim,' he says. 'There were a lot of raised eyebrows and a lot of discussion around the root cause of my stroke, because of my age.'
White says that with three out of 10 Canadians unable to recognize the most common signs of stroke, there's still a lot of work to do. 'There are still not enough Canadians who recognize the signs and know to call 9-1-1 right away if they witness or experience them,' she says.
Levy's experience underscores the importance of stroke awareness for everyone, regardless of age or health status.
"I never had 'stroke' on my bingo card before it happened to me," he reflects. "I realize how easily things could have gone the other way if I hadn't been surrounded by a family that knew what to look for – and what to do when they saw it.'
'If so much as one person hears my story, learns, and acts, then that's everything to me,' he adds. 'Awareness is survival.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
I review sports watches for a living and this free Garmin app makes heart rate training more fun
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Using your heart rate is a great way to judge your effort during training, whether that's to ensure that you're not pushing too hard during easy runs or pushing hard enough during HIIT workouts in the gym. I'm a keen runner and always keep an eye on my heart rate during runs, just to make sure it's in roughly the right place for the effort I feel I'm putting in — sometimes a strangely high reading is a sign I'm getting ill, for example. Naturally, you can just use your actual heart rate for this, using the heart rate zones on your watch and getting to know the bpm you usually work at. Or, if you use one of the best Garmin watches, you can make things more fun by installing the free Garmin Connect IQ app Pulse OX, which allows you to assign a different animal to each heart rate zone. Pulse Ox is free and fun to use It's not the most sophisticated Garmin Connect IQ app out there, but Pulse OX is free and easy to install and set up. Once you've found it in the Connect IQ store, you install it to your watch and then assign it to a data field in your sports modes. For example, in the running mode on my Garmin Fenix 8, I have it set up on a simple screen along with workout duration, for when I'm just running to time and heart rate. Then you go into the Pulse Ox settings in the Connect IQ app and pick which animal you want for each zone — there are 22 zones available, so you can really customize this to your heart's content. You actually don't have to pick an animal at all — you just type what you want to show for each heart rate zone, and it'll show during workouts, but animals are more fun, I think. For my purposes, I just use seven of the zones, with a huge zone 1 that I've named after my incredibly lazy cat Taz, then I progress through various animals (mostly cats, I like cats) up to Cheetah for my max heart rate zone. Then you head out and train, and suddenly, pushing to a high heart rate zone feels a little bit more fun. Maybe. How to get your heart rate zones right To use this app or do any kind of heart rate training, it's important to know your heart rate zones. These will be set up by default on sports watches, but based on population-level estimates that might not be correct for you. The standard estimate used subtracts your age from 220 to get your max heart rate, then zones are worked out from there. However, for me, this would mean a max heart rate of 184bpm, when mine is actually more like 174bpm, so my zones would be completely off. The best sports watches do adjust your max heart rate and zones automatically using data from workouts over time, but it's still not always reliable. You can find your true max heart rate by looking at the measurements from a watch or heart rate chest strap during your hardest workouts, or something like an all-out 5K race if you're a runner. Then use this max heart rate to work out your rough training zones. There are a lot of models out there, but a basic one would be 60-70% of max heart rate is your easy training zone, 70-80% is for aerobic endurance, 80-90% is for hard intervals, while 90% and above is flat out. Just bear in mind that the optical heart rate sensors on smartwatches are not always reliable — I myself use a chest strap monitor for more accurate heart rate measurements during workouts. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button. More from Tom's Guide I ran a half marathon with the Garmin Forerunner 570 vs. Garmin Forerunner 265 — here's the winner The best Garmin watches to have on your wrist Garmin Fenix 8 vs Apple Watch Ultra 2 marathon test


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
Elderly blind woman regains sight thanks to rare surgery that implants tooth into eye socket
An eye for an eye and a tooth… for an eye? A blind Canadian woman has had her vision partly restored after undergoing a bizarre operation that surgically implanted a tooth into her left eye socket. Gail Lane, 75, who lost her sight a decade ago when an auto-immune disorder left her corneas badly scarred, is one of three Canadians to receive the rare osteo-odonto keratoprosthesis procedure, known colloquially as tooth-in-eye surgery. 3 Gail Lane, 75, who lost her vision to an auto-immune disorder, is one of three Canadians to receive the rare 'tooth-in-eye' procedure to restore their sight. Gail Lane Lane told the CBC that the first thing she was able to see was light, followed by the wagging tail of her partner's service dog, a black lab named Piper. She said that since then, her vision has continued to improve. 'I can see lots of color, and I can see outside now,' Lane told the outlet. 'The trees and the grass and flowers — it's a wonderful feeling to be able to see some of those things again.' Six months after the surgery was completed, she finally saw the face of her beloved, Phil, who she met after she lost her vision. Ophthalmologist Dr. Greg Moloney of Mount Saint Joseph Hospital in Vancouver was the first physician to bring the rare surgery to Canada. 3 The operation involves modifying a patient's tooth with a specialized lens, then implanting it in their eye socket. Greg Moloney/Providence Health Care He said the first step in the procedure is to remove a tooth from the patient, which is then implanted in their cheek for a few months until it gets surrounded by strong connective tissue, the outlet said. For Lane, doctors used one of her canines, or in this case the aptly nicknamed 'eye' tooth. Next, both the tooth and tissue are removed from the cheek, and a lens or plastic focusing telescope is fitted into a hole drilled into the pulpy mass, which is then stitched into the patient's eye socket. 'It's a complex and strange operation, but it basically involves replacing the cornea,' said Moloney, who noted the goal is to create a 'structure that is strong enough to hold onto the plastic focusing telescope but is not going to be rejected by the body.' 3 Lane said one of the first things she was able to see with her vision restored was the wagging tail of her partner's service dog, Piper. Providence Health Care Vancouver Moloney described the recovery process as uncomfortable but not painful. Lane told the outlet she's thrilled to be able to do more things for herself now. 'I'm hoping to have more mobility and independence in terms of short trips and walks here and there where I don't always have to have someone's arm for me to grab onto,' she said. 'I'm just looking forward, really, to seeing what I can do or do again — and trying to just be patient and let my brain adjust a bit because that's another big part of this.' She said soon she'll be receiving a new pair of glasses that should help improve her vision even further. 'I'm starting to see facial features on other people as well, which is also pretty exciting,' Lane said.


Medscape
2 days ago
- Medscape
Coronary Sinus Reducer Shows Promise, With Caveats
The coronary sinus reducer, an hourglass-shaped stent that narrows the coronary sinus to increase coronary sinus pressure, has shown some promise in treating patients with refractory angina. But a meta-analysis published today in JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions found the benefits of the intervention are likely smaller than those early studies predicted. 'There have been lots of unblinded single-arm studies [of the procedure] but only three randomized controlled trials, so we wanted to look at the different effect sizes to better understand the overall potential efficacy,' said Rasha Al-Lamee, MD, a cardiologist at the National Heart and Lung Institute, part of Imperial College London, London, England, who led the meta-analysis. Al-Lamee and her colleagues looked at data from a combined total of 180 patients in the three trials, as well as 13 single-arm studies with 668 total patients. They found the coronary sinus procedure to be safe, with a success rate of 98.3%. But while both the single-arm and the controlled trials demonstrated improvements in symptoms of angina, the effect size was much smaller in the controlled trials. In the more rigorous trials, 26% of patients experienced at least a one-class improvement and 17% had at least a two-class improvement on the Canadian Cardiovascular Society classification of angina. Those figures were about one third of the gains reported in the single-arm trials. What's more, the randomized controlled trials found no evidence of benefit based on continuous measurements such as the Seattle Angina Questionnaire. Nor did they find improvements in objective measures such as myocardial perfusion associated with the intervention. Deepak Bhatt, MD, a cardiologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, who co-wrote an editorial accompanying the journal article, said more treatment options are needed for patients with refractory angina, who have often exhausted all other medical therapies and surgical procedures. But while coronary sinus reduction shows promise, the meta-analysis demonstrates why more, and larger, trials will be needed before clinicians can use it more broadly. 'It's not an inexpensive procedure, so we want substantial, objectively quantified evidence that it helps patients,' he told Medscape Medical News . 'History is littered with examples of things we were convinced worked but really didn't.' Percutaneous laser therapy, for example, seemed to show benefits for refractory angina at first, but more rigorous randomized trials found no benefit from the procedure, he said. The coronary sinus reducer device is already approved in the UK and Europe and its use is on the rise there, said Al-Lamee, but it has not yet been approved in the US. The ongoing COSIRA-II trial, with an estimated enrollment of 380 patients, should be well-powered enough to provide definitive results and support US approval, she said. Should COSIRA-II show definite benefit, she added, the device may become more of a frontline treatment, used before riskier revascularization options. 'Why have a redo of coronary artery bypass surgery if you have a device that is safe and effective?' she said. Al-Lamee had received consulting and speaker fees from Shockwave Medical, which makes the CSR device. Bhatt reported no relevant financial conflicts.