Could this have been a TIA?
Last Wed (10/1/25), I had an unusual event. While reading an email, the name of my pulmonologist didn't seem "right" to me. I asked my husband what the correct name was & he told me the name that was in the email! It still didn't sound correct to me.
I moved on to another email but my mind seem "cloudy" in focusing, so I gave up.
No numbness anywhere, no visual blurring, no language problems. After a few minutes of floudering with brain fog, the adrenaline started rushing out of fear and I became shaky inside. After 15 minutes, I checked my B/P & it was 191/85. Pretty high. It took about 90 minutes for me to calm down & get my shower. After that, my brain felt back to normal but now I'm fearful of another "event".
Could this have been a TIA? Thank you for your answers.
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Tagging a few other members who may have some input on your question about whether what you experienced may have been a TIA, @dks. Please meet @sissybitus @brigid4 @esperos70 @keithl56 @caroleramsay @musicflowers4u @huffman @halifax.
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1 Reaction@scottrl
Thank you for posting the video, Scott. Good tips. Good reminder to really pay attention to any unusual symptoms. I keep a log of any new or noteworthy symptoms so I can reference back to them. Sometimes the details of what you were actually feeling weeks or months ago fades away over time. I also log side effects to meds. It’s not daily.
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4 ReactionsPlease don't mess around with anything stroke-related.
I don't think I had a TIA before my stroke, but in retrospect I clearly should have been paying closer attention.
You may find my YouTube episode "Warning Signs" helpful:
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4 ReactionsHi Diane. Your experience sounds very similar to the TIA I just had a week ago. I’m 66. I was fine all day updating documents on my computer. At 9:15 pm, I moved to my recliner to type 3 words on my phone. The first word was fine. The second word started out with 3 wrong letters. I thought typo and tried two more times and it got worse. I thought, “Why can’t I type this word right? Wait, how do you spell this word? I have no idea how to spell it (not one letter). Wait, what word am I trying to type? I’m getting so confused!!! OMG, am I having a stroke?” I started self-stroke tests. I said out loud “I am going to the store.” But only unintelligible sounds came out. My thought now, “Oh no, I’m speaking gibberish! I am having stroke! I can’t believe it. I need to call 911. Better use the land line so they know where I’m at. Wait, do I know how? If I can’t type, I can’t successfully make a call. I better get to a neighbor quickly before I fall on the floor and it’s two days before someone finds me.”
Thankfully, I’m in a condo so two neighbors are 15 feet from my front door. I was still able to walk fine. I rang one bell repeatedly and then the other. I kept pointing to my head and speaking gibberish to one neighbor. I tried repeatedly to say stroke but all that came out each time was oy, oy, oy. First neighbor didn’t understand. I was so frustrated. My other neighbor came out, knew gibberish was a stroke sign and asked if he should call 911. I nodded yes. I was sooo relieved he broke the code. I went back in my condo to grab what I needed for the hospital. I kept trying to talk and suddenly normal words were coming out again and I was relieved to know it was a TIA and not a full stroke. Gibberish lasted about 3-5 minutes. My hands were shaking probably due to adrenalin. But my voice was way beyond shaky (weird up and down with odd spacing) for 2 hours even after my body was calm and I was calm. I read that vocal cords can be chaotic for a while after a TIA. Paramedics were there in 3 minutes. In the hospital 24 hours. I had been in afib the day before the TIA so that likely created a clot that cut off blood to my speech center. I’ve had a few retinal TIAs, but this was my first cognitive one. I’m on a blood thinner now. I found it amazing to have one part of my brain shut down but still have presence of mind. Luckily, I’m pretty level-headed in a crisis. Very scary experience.
Do you have afib or any condition that predisposes you to blood clots? You need to see your doctor right away to determine the cause. Not meaning to scare you, but people that have a TIA are really high risk for a full stroke especially for the next 30 days.
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