My Story: “There Is Life After A Stroke”

Wanda Walton and her family had just spent the afternoon in the Los Angeles area, and she was driving home on the freeway when her left side went numb.

“She swerved the car … and then she did it again,” her daughter Brittany Walton recalled. “I remember my dad asking her, calling her name like, ‘what’s wrong?’ And my mom didn’t say anything back.”

Wanda tried to speak but nothing came out. Her then-husband coached her to pull the minivan over and he got behind the wheel. Wanda then screamed as she suddenly had excruciating pain in the back of her head.

They raced to the hospital, where tests showed she was having a stroke. Doctors gave her the clot-busting drug tPA, short for tissue plasminogen activator. Unbeknownst to Wanda, the headaches, dizziness, nausea and blurred vision she’d had off and on in the weeks prior had been several transient ischemic attacks, or “mini-strokes.”

Hours after being admitted to the hospital, Wanda suffered a second, more severe stroke that paralyzed her left side.

“It just happened so quick. It’s just like I lost control,” Wanda, then 47, said of the stroke in October 2000. “I was on the phone, and the phone dropped.”

The mother of two had been on high blood pressure medication for years and had recently started taking medication for high cholesterol. Her doctor had warned her to get her blood pressure and cholesterol down or she might have a stroke.

“My response was, ‘I’m not going to have a stroke. I’m too young to have a stroke. That’s for older people.’”

Wanda, whose grandfather and great-grandfather both died of strokes in their 50s, later discovered the role that family history can play in a person’s health.

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Wanda Walton and her family had just spent the afternoon in the Los Angeles area, and she was driving home on the freeway when her left side went numb.

“She swerved the car … and then she did it again,” her daughter Brittany Walton recalled. “I remember my dad asking her, calling her name like, ‘what’s wrong?’ And my mom didn’t say anything back.”

Wanda tried to speak but nothing came out. Her then-husband coached her to pull the minivan over and he got behind the wheel. Wanda then screamed as she suddenly had excruciating pain in the back of her head.

They raced to the hospital, where tests showed she was having a stroke. Doctors gave her the clot-busting drug tPA, short for tissue plasminogen activator. Unbeknownst to Wanda, the headaches, dizziness, nausea and blurred vision she’d had off and on in the weeks prior had been several transient ischemic attacks, or “mini-strokes.”

Hours after being admitted to the hospital, Wanda suffered a second, more severe stroke that paralyzed her left side.

“It just happened so quick. It’s just like I lost control,” Wanda, then 47, said of the stroke in October 2000. “I was on the phone, and the phone dropped.”

The mother of two had been on high blood pressure medication for years and had recently started taking medication for high cholesterol. Her doctor had warned her to get her blood pressure and cholesterol down or she might have a stroke.

“My response was, ‘I’m not going to have a stroke. I’m too young to have a stroke. That’s for older people.’”

Wanda, whose grandfather and great-grandfather both died of strokes in their 50s, later discovered the role that family history can play in a person’s health.

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