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Why does the old man smell bad after a stroke?
For the sake of parents, you should know that if you have a stroke, the capillaries in your brain will slowly burst. Don't panic in this case. No matter where the patient is (bathroom, bedroom or living room), don't move him. Because, if it moves, it will accelerate the rupture of microvessels. So help the patient sit still and prevent him from falling down again, and then start (bleeding). It is of course best to have needles specially designed for injection at home. If it doesn't work, take the needle for sewing clothes and stick it at the tips of the patient's ten fingers (there is no fixed acupuncture point, which is about a little away from the nails), so that it will bleed (in case the blood doesn't come out, you can squeeze it by hand), and when all ten fingers bleed (one drop for each finger), the patient will naturally wake up in a few minutes. If the mouth is crooked, pull his ear, pull his ear red, stab two needles in the earlobes of both ears, and shed two drops of blood. After a few minutes, the mouth will return to its original state. When the patient returns to normal and feels normal, he can turn the corner. Otherwise, if he is rushed to an ambulance for medical treatment, I'm afraid he won't get to the hospital all the way, and his brain capillaries will burst. If you can get away with it, if you can be as patient as Dean Sun, it depends on the good deeds of your ancestors. The method of bloodletting to save lives was said by Mr. Xia Boting, a Chinese medicine doctor who lives in Hsinchu. And with my own personal experiments, I dare say it is 100% effective. Probably in 1968, one morning, a teacher who was teaching at Feng Jia College in Taichung was having a class. A teacher ran to his classroom and said breathlessly, Mr. Liu, come on, the director has a stroke; He immediately ran to the third floor and saw director Chen Putian, looking pale, vague and crooked. Obviously, he had a stroke. Please go to the western pharmacy outside the school gate at once, buy an injection needle and stab it directly on Director Chen's ten fingers. After ten fingertips saw blood (like a drop of beans), in a few minutes, Director Chen's face changed greatly and his eyes were full of god. Only when his mouth was still crooked, he pulled Director Chen's ear to make it bloodshot. When his ear turned red, he stabbed two needles in the left and right earlobes, and two drops of blood flowed from both earlobes. A miracle appeared. Less than three or five minutes. Let Director Chen sit still for a while, drink a cup of hot tea, then help him downstairs, drive to Hua Hui Hospital, have a can of intravenous drip, rest all night and go back to school. Everything is as usual, no sequelae. On the other hand, most stroke patients were sent to hospital for treatment, and their blood vessels ruptured rapidly after shock all the way, so most patients could not afford to get sick. Therefore, stroke ranks second in the list of causes of death, and the luckiest one can only keep his old age and finally be disabled for life. What a terrible disease it is. If everyone remembers this method and rescues it immediately, they can come back to life in a short time and ensure that 100% is normal. I hope everyone can tell you about this first aid method. Stroke can be excluded from the list of causes of death. After reading it, I realized that stroke is a general term for acute cerebrovascular diseases in traditional Chinese medicine. It is a disease with sudden fainting and unconsciousness as the main symptoms, accompanied by oral deviation, language impairment and hemiplegia. Because of its high incidence, high mortality, high disability rate, high recurrence rate and many complications, the medical community ranks it as one of the three major diseases that threaten human health, along with coronary heart disease and cancer. The importance of preventing stroke has attracted the attention of medical circles at home and abroad, and doctors are exploring preventive measures for stroke from various aspects. 1, hypertension is the most dangerous factor of stroke, and it is also a central link of stroke prevention. We should effectively control blood pressure, insist on taking medicine for a long time, and observe the changes of blood pressure for a long time so as to deal with it in time. 2. Controlling and reducing transient cerebrovascular ischemic attack (that is, transient hemiplegia, weakness or dizziness, diplopia, dysphagia, unstable walking and other symptoms) is the key link to prevent stroke. Once a minor stroke occurs, it is necessary to pay close attention to systematic treatment immediately, and a complete stroke is possible to avoid. 3. Pay attention to the premonitory symptoms of stroke such as dizziness, headache, numbness of limbs, lethargy and abnormal personality, and take treatment measures to avoid the occurrence of stroke. 4. Eliminate the inducing factors of stroke, such as mood swings, excessive fatigue and overexertion. Should be self-controlled and avoided. 5, timely treatment of diseases that may cause stroke, such as arteriosclerosis, diabetes, coronary heart disease, hyperlipidemia, hyperviscosity, sexual behavior, obesity, cervical spondylosis, etc. 6. The diet should have a reasonable structure, mainly low in salt, fat and cholesterol, and eat more soy products, vegetables and fruits. Avoid smoking and drinking less, and the daily drinking amount should not exceed 100 ml (liquor). Check blood sugar and blood lipid regularly. 7. Insisting on physical exercise and physical activity can promote the decomposition of cholesterol, reduce blood lipids, reduce platelet aggregation, and relieve mental stress and fatigue. 8. Pay attention to psychological prevention, keep cheerful and emotionally stable. Do a regular life, combine work and rest, keep defecation unobstructed, and avoid a sharp rise in blood pressure caused by forced defecation, which in turn leads to cerebrovascular diseases. Stroke patients should pay attention to keep warm and prevent colds when the climate changes; Don't use your brain too much; Be careful when going out at ordinary times to prevent falling; Get up, bow your head, tie your shoelaces and other daily activities should be slow; Bathing time should not be too long; Pay attention to the treatment of primary diseases and prevent the recurrence of cerebrovascular diseases. According to different causes, insist on treatment and review necessary items regularly. In order to prevent recurrence, the above precautions should be paid enough attention. If you are worried about stroke, you must do the following four things at the same time: 1. Eat more fruits and vegetables, at least five kinds a day, including carrots. People who eat carrots five times a week or more are 68% less likely to have a stroke than those who eat carrots only once a month or less! This is the result of Harvard University tracking 90,000 female nurses for eight years. In addition, spinach is also a very effective food to prevent stroke. The protective effect of carrots and spinach is because they are rich in beta-carotene. According to research, people who consume 15-20 mg of beta-carotene every day are obviously different from those who consume only 6 mg every day. Vegetables rich in β -carotene such as carrots and spinach can prevent stroke, because carotene can prevent cholesterol from being oxidized into harmful forms, and then accumulate in blood vessels, causing blood clots. More importantly, if the blood contains a lot of beta-carotene and vitamin A, it can help you avoid stroke death, or reduce the nerve damage caused by stroke and accelerate your recovery! This is the conclusion reached by researchers at the University of Brussels after examining the blood of 80 stroke patients within 24 hours after onset. This is because when you have a stroke, that is, when your brain is deprived of oxygen, the function of your brain cells begins to be damaged, and the most serious situation is the damage of brain nerve cells. But if you have a lot of vitamin A in your blood, it can prevent all kinds of cell diseases when they occur, thus reducing the degree of brain damage or the chance of death. 2. Eat fish at least three times a week, especially fish rich in omega-3 fat. If your blood contains a lot of omega-3 fatty acids, your chances of having a stroke will be less; And even if you have a stroke, the damage will be less. A recent study in the Netherlands found that people aged 60-69 who eat fish at least once a week, and those who don't eat fish, are less likely to have a stroke in the next 15 years. A series of studies in Japan also found that fishermen who eat 9 ounces of fish a day are 25-40% less likely to die of stroke than farmers who eat only 3 ounces of fish a day. This is because the magical omega-3 fatty acids can regulate the state of blood, making it difficult for blood to form thrombus, thus preventing cerebral vascular occlusion. If you are old enough to worry about the blockage of your blood vessels, imagine this situation: when you take fish oil, it will stay in your cell membrane. This cell filled with fish oil is elastic and as soft as liquid. In other words, this soft form of cells is easier to squeeze through narrow blood vessels and deliver oxygen to cells in the brain and heart. This ingenious change can save your life, especially when your blood vessels are aging and blocked. By the way, satiety and animal fat have the opposite effect, which will make the cell membrane more rigid. Therefore, in order to prevent stroke and cardiovascular diseases, it is best not to eat this kind of fat. 3. Control the salt intake. Even if salt doesn't raise your blood pressure, it may be harmful to brain tissue and cause a slight stroke. Someone once experimented with mice and fed them high-salt and low-salt diets respectively. Mice fed a high-salt diet died of a stroke within fifteen weeks, although their blood pressure did not rise; However, only 12% of mice who ate a low-salt diet died of stroke. Mice that died by eating a high-salt diet suffered a series of minor strokes, which eventually led to brain tissue necrosis and arterial injury. 4. Consider drinking tea, especially green tea. Remember, taking these actions can reduce the degree of nerve damage and reduce the chance of death from stroke in case you have a stroke. Stroke patients have a history of hypertension and cerebral arteriosclerosis. Once you have a stroke, it will be more troublesome to treat. Even if rescued from danger, it will leave sequelae such as hemiplegia, which will not heal for a long time. Early detection and early measures can often prevent serious consequences. So, what are the signs of a stroke? Stroke patients often first appear on one side of the face or hands and feet suddenly feel numb or weak, mouth askew, drooling; Sudden temporary difficulty in speaking or inability to understand what others are saying; Temporary blurred vision or blindness; Suddenly feel dizzy or unstable, or even faint; Sleepiness without obvious reasons; A sudden change in character or intelligence; Have unexplained headaches, etc. Anyone with any one or more of the above symptoms should immediately let the patient rest in bed and keep quiet, and don't be nervous, excited, afraid or fidgety. It's better to call an ambulance or a doctor for examination. If you don't have the conditions, when you need to go to a nearby hospital, you should use a stretcher to get on the bus, and you should prevent bumps on the road. The patient should lie flat with his head tilted to one side to prevent vomit from choking the trachea. Stroke is a pathological change caused by cerebrovascular disease, and it is a manifestation of local blood circulation disorder in the brain. It can be divided into two categories: hemorrhagic stroke and ischemic stroke. Cerebral hemorrhage and subarachnoid hemorrhage belong to hemorrhagic stroke; Cerebral embolism and cerebral thrombosis belong to ischemic stroke. The clinical manifestations of hemorrhagic stroke are severe headache, vomiting, mania, lethargy, coma or hemiplegia; The clinical manifestations of ischemic stroke are hemiplegia, hemiplegia, aphasia and visual impairment. Health guide: 1. Prevention and treatment of primary disease: the longer the hypertension lasts, the more obvious the arteriosclerosis is, and it is easy to have a stroke. Blood pressure should be measured frequently at ordinary times, and medication should be taken to control blood pressure within the normal range as much as possible. Coronary heart disease is often caused by arrhythmia, which reduces the pumping ability of the heart, makes the cerebral blood flow slow, and is prone to ischemic stroke. Hyperlipidemia can lead to atherosclerosis and increased blood viscosity. Diabetes will harden the arterial wall and increase blood viscosity. Both can induce stroke. Therefore, effective control and prevention of primary disease is an important key to prevent stroke. 2. Emotional adjustment: A relaxed and happy mood can effectively prevent the aggravation of primary diseases such as hypertension. You can distract yourself by listening to light music and chatting with young people. Don't watch scary movies. Don't get angry when something happens, pay attention to the combination of work and rest. Go shopping and exercise on an empty stomach in the morning to eat snacks to prevent hypoglycemia and cerebral thrombosis. The weather changes obviously, especially the sudden cooling will make blood vessels contract and blood pressure rise, which will lead to the deterioration of the disease. You should wear more clothes to keep warm. 3. Quit smoking and avoid alcohol: Smoking and excessive drinking will further damage heart function, increase blood viscosity and blood lipid, and easily induce stroke. 4. Keep the stool unobstructed: Keep the stool unobstructed at ordinary times, and don't get angry when defecating, so as to avoid the increase of abdominal pressure, sudden increase of cerebral blood flow and cerebral hemorrhage. 5. Diet adjustment: The diet should be light. Eat more fresh vegetables and aquatic products, such as vegetables, radishes, kelp and laver. Eat less and eat more. Eat enough dietary fiber and intestine-moistening food, fast fat meat and animal offal, and don't eat irritating onions, peppers, coffee, etc. Eat less refined sugar, honey, fruit candy, cakes, etc. The amount of salt is limited to 4 grams per day, which can prevent water retention and reduce the burden on the heart. 6. Physical exercise: Choose Tai Ji Chuan, walking, Qigong and other sports for exercise. Don't lie in bed all day. Staying in bed for a long time will slow down the blood flow and cause ischemic stroke, which is also not conducive to the gradual recovery of physical function after stroke. 7. Seek medical attention in time: If you find yourself walking unsteadily, one limb is weak, your mouth is crooked, your lips are numb, or you may have cerebral vasospasm or slight stroke when holding something on the ground, you should seek medical attention in time to prevent the disease from developing further. Language Recovery after Stroke Chief Physician Li Shan More than half of stroke patients can't speak or speak clearly or can speak spontaneously, but they can't understand what others are saying. These are all language disorders caused by stroke. Medically, language disorders of stroke patients are divided into aphasia and dysarthria. The former is divided into motor aphasia, sensory aphasia, mixed aphasia and named aphasia. Motor aphasia is also called expressive aphasia. Although patients can understand other people's languages (spoken and written), they can't express themselves orally or in writing. If the patient can't speak at all, it is called complete motor aphasia; If the patient can only speak simple sentences and can't speak complex sentences, it is called incomplete motor aphasia. Sensory aphasia is also called receptive aphasia. Patients have the ability to speak, but they can't understand other people's words and their own words. The content of the speech is chaotic or intermittent, and it is often irrelevant to answer questions and use wrong words, which makes it impossible to have a normal conversation. Mixed aphasia includes both motor aphasia and sensory aphasia. The patient can neither understand what others mean when they speak, nor speak. Named aphasia patients can say the purpose of the object, but can't say the name of the object. Sometimes you occasionally say the name of an object, but you forget it in an instant, so it is also called amnesia. The focus of aphasia is in the language center of cerebral cortex. At present, there is no specific drug that specifically acts on the language center. The aphasia of most patients can gradually recover with the improvement of the primary disease. Special functional training is very important for the smooth rehabilitation of aphasia patients. At present, it is believed that the earlier the rehabilitation treatment for language disorders, the better. Recover quickly within 3 months after illness, and it is difficult to recover after one year. Functional rehabilitation training includes pronunciation training, phrase training, conversation training, reading training, sentence retelling training, character recognition, pointing out the name of an article, executing commands, matching pictures with objects, etc. Rehabilitation training for patients with complete aphasia should start with learning pronunciation, like teaching children to speak, such as making patients pronounce "ah" or whistling with their mouths to induce pronunciation. Then talk about common words, such as eating, drinking, doing, etc. Or show a card and let the patient read the words on it. Then teach disyllabic words, phrases, short sentences and long sentences in turn. During training, speech is combined with visual stimuli, for example, when eating, it is combined with food, or by looking at pictures, speech is combined with pictures. Patients with incomplete motor aphasia can speak some words, phrases, sentences or are not fluent. Patients are often poor in vocabulary, slow in speech and repetitive in language. We should teach these patients patiently, read stories repeatedly, practice flexibility and practice language skills. The training of patients with sensory aphasia is more difficult than that of patients with motor aphasia. Training can adopt visual logic method and gesture method. For example, give the patient a face plate, put a towel away and tell him to "wash his face". Although the patient doesn't understand the meaning of the word "wash his face", he will logically understand that you are asking him to wash his face. If this is repeated for many days, the language and vision will be combined for a long time, and the language function will be restored. Gesture means that family members or caregivers train patients with gestures and language. If the patient is allowed to "eat" and the trainer demonstrates the action of eating with chopsticks many times, the patient will soon understand and take the initiative to eat with chopsticks. Functional training for patients with mixed aphasia is more difficult, and it must be repeated by combining speaking, watching and listening. If the patient is asked to wear a sweater, he should not only say "wear a sweater" for the patient to listen to, but also point to the prepared sweater and make a gesture for the patient to see. Another language disorder caused by stroke is dysarthria, which is mainly manifested in inaccurate pronunciation, unclear articulation, abnormal intonation, speech speed and rhythm, and excessive nasal sound. The rehabilitation method must carry out pronunciation training as soon as possible, including beginning pronunciation, continuous pronunciation, volume control and tone control. Exercise training of pronunciation organs, such as lip and tongue movement and soft jaw elevation; Pronunciation rhythm training includes stress training, intonation training and pause practice. Such patients often have excessive muscle tension, including laryngeal muscle tension. Reducing the muscle tension of laryngeal language through relaxation therapy such as breathing training and breathing control can lay the foundation for breathing and pronunciation. Relaxation therapy to reduce the tension of language and muscles through psychological behavior or drugs is also one of the important rehabilitation methods for such patients. Cerebrovascular accident, namely stroke, is a disorder of cerebral blood circulation caused by cerebrovascular disease. It is characterized by ipsilateral hand-foot paralysis, that is, hemiplegia. Severe coma, convulsions and even death. Stroke can be divided into ischemic stroke and hemorrhagic stroke. Ischemic stroke includes atherosclerotic cerebral thrombosis and cerebral embolism. Atherosclerotic cerebral thrombosis accounts for 60% of stroke patients. After arteriosclerosis, the blood vessels become narrow, the blood vessel wall is not smooth, and the blood flow is slow, which leads to coagulation and ischemia and necrosis of some brain tissues. This kind of stroke is common in the elderly, mostly in sleep. When I wake up, I find that my hands and feet don't work, and my condition often develops gradually after I get sick. Cerebral embolism is an "embolus" formed by other parts, which flows into the cerebral vessels with blood to block the cerebral vessels and make some brain tissues ischemic and necrotic. Common "embolus", such as thrombus falling from atrium in patients with atrial fibrillation; In patients with subacute bacterial endocarditis, the bacterial embolus fell off the heart valve; Fat embolus enters blood vessels during long bone fracture; Air embolism when suffering from diving disease, etc. Patients with cerebral embolism all have the basis of other diseases and all have sudden onset. Hemorrhagic stroke includes hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage and subarachnoid hemorrhage. Hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage is seen in patients with long-term hypertension. When blood pressure fluctuates greatly, the middle cerebral artery and other places rupture, resulting in cerebral hemorrhage, leading to partial brain tissue necrosis. This kind of stroke is more common in patients with long-term hypertension who have not been properly treated, and often occurs in the case of drinking, excitement, anger or exertion. Patients with cerebral hemorrhage can often enter coma quickly, such as pontine hemorrhage, and often accompanied by high fever. Subarachnoid hemorrhage is mostly caused by the rupture of congenital aneurysm at the bottom of the brain. This kind of bleeding is common in young people and even children. There may be some headaches before the attack, and severe headaches, coma and convulsions will occur during the attack. The diagnosis of cerebrovascular accident is not difficult. It is very helpful to do lumbar puncture to check whether there is blood in cerebrospinal fluid, which helps to distinguish what kind of stroke it is. When cerebrovascular accident happens, it should be treated on the spot. For ischemic stroke, the main treatment is to improve blood circulation in the brain. Commonly used drugs include low molecular dextran, salvia miltiorrhiza, aspirin and so on. For hemorrhagic stroke, the main treatment measures are to reduce intracranial pressure and eliminate brain edema. The commonly used drugs are mannitol and dexamethasone. If a ruptured cerebral aneurysm is suspected, cerebral angiography and sometimes surgery can be performed if the patient's condition permits. Hemiplegia of hand and foot is the main sequela of stroke, which requires timely application of acupuncture, massage and leveling therapy, and proper exercise can improve the condition. The prevention of stroke mainly lies in the treatment of hypertension, and the blood pressure is controlled within the basic normal range. Patients should be optimistic and maintain emotional stability. Old people should do proper activities and not stay in bed for a long time. People with transient ischemic attack should take some dipyridamole or aspirin to prevent cerebral thrombosis. What is the popular science journal of stroke medicine "Seeking medical advice-opening books is beneficial" Author: Huazhong wind usually refers to acute cerebrovascular disease, also known as cerebrovascular accident and stroke. Stroke is often divided into ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke and mixed stroke. Ischemic stroke includes: 1. Transient ischemic attack, clinical symptoms usually disappear completely within 24 hours; 2. Cerebral thrombosis, with slow onset and progressive aggravation; 3. Cerebral embolism, the onset is sudden, mostly because the embolus outside the heart suddenly falls off and flows into the brain tissue through blood flow, blocking blood vessels; 4. Lacunar cerebral infarction is the blockage of intracranial small vessels. The patient's symptoms are not very serious or have no clinical symptoms. It is usually multiple and has a good prognosis. Hemorrhagic stroke includes: 1. Cerebral hemorrhage, mostly caused by hypertensive cerebral arteriosclerosis, progresses rapidly, often accompanied by conscious disturbance, hemiplegia, hemiparalysis, hemianopia, aphasia and other limited signs; 2. Subarachnoid hemorrhage is mainly caused by congenital cerebral aneurysm rupture, vascular malformation and cerebral arteriosclerosis hemorrhage. The bleeding is all in the subarachnoid space on the surface of the brain. The onset is mostly severe headache or vomiting, or disturbance of consciousness, which is often transient neck stiffness without paralysis and other limited signs or not obvious. Mixed stroke refers to the fresh cerebrovascular disease with bleeding and infarction during CT scanning of the head or one after another. This kind of patient is rare.