This Christ-centered blog is designed to serve stroke survivors, families and friends, through sharing experience and faith. My own stroke came on May 8, 1998. God provided medical professionals, friends, fellow believers, and strength to get me through some struggling recovery times.
The researchers did not find an association between migraine and the risk of either heart attack or stroke in nonsmokers. But among smokers, migraine was associated with a threefold increased risk of stroke.
However, even though the study found an association between migraine and stroke risk in smokers, it did not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.
The chilling video of Los Angeles TV reporter Serene Branson was played over and over the last few days. She began stumbling over slurred words on live television. Her face appeared not quite symmetric - class stroke signs.
Doctors at the University of California, Los Angeles, who performed a brain scan and blood work on Branson, said she suffered a type of migraine - often called a complex or complicated migraine - that can mimic symptoms of a stroke, the Associated Press reported Friday.
Dr. Ralph L. Sacco, president of the American Heart Association and chairman of neurology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, explained that "a complicated migraine can often masquerade as a stroke or TIA (transient ischemic attack, sometimes called a mini-stroke)."
The symptoms can look just like a stroke, Sacco said, including loss of vision, blurry vision, paralysis on one side of the body, trouble speaking and trouble walking. "All kinds of things we associate with a TIA or stroke can be part of a complicated migraine," he said.
For people whose first experience with a migraine is a complex migraine, Sacco advises that they assume it is a stroke, however.
"If people have these classic symptoms, we should treat them as the emergency we think they are, which is a possible stroke," he said.
Branson did the right thing: Even though her symptoms subsided, she sought follow-up care. Too often, people don't see a doctor after a mini-stroke, setting themselves up for full-blown strokes. The lesson we can all take away: When you detect these signs, get help right away. It might just save a life.
From ABC News, a video of a good discussion of stroke signs:
Everyone should know the stroke signs and symptoms. And now, one more reason: There is growing suspicion - no proof yet - that certain migraines might be stroke-related.
The two new studies, both published in BMJ, add to the evidence of a suspected migraine-disease link. But both research teams say the findings should not alarm those who suffer migraine with aura because the risk is still low.
''We don't want to scare people at all," researcher Tobias Kurth, M.D., Sc.D., director of research at INSERM at the Hospital del la Pitie Salpetriere in Paris, tells WebMD. The vast majority of migraine sufferers, he says, will not get a stroke because of their migraines.