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Learn the signs of Stroke

 

 

Learn about Stroke

Think you're having a stroke? Call Call us000

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Think you're having a stroke?

Call Call us000

Learn More

 
What is a stroke: A stroke happens when blood supply to the brain is interrupted. Blood is carried to the brain by blood vessels called arteries. Blood contains oxygen and important nutrients for your brain cells. Blood may be interrupted or stop moving through an artery, because the artery is blocked (ischaemic stroke) or bursts (haemorrhagic stroke). When brain cells do not get enough oxygen or nutrients, they die. The area of brain damage is called a cerebral infarct.

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What is a stroke: A stroke happens when blood supply to the brain is interrupted. Blood is carried to the brain by blood vessels called arteries. Blood contains oxygen and important nutrients for your brain cells. Blood may be interrupted or stop moving through an artery, because the artery is blocked (ischaemic stroke) or bursts (haemorrhagic stroke). When brain cells do not get enough oxygen or nutrients, they die. The area of brain damage is called a cerebral infarct.

Learn More

Every 10 minutes, an Australian will have a stroke. 434,000 Australians have an irregular heartbeat. Stroke costs the Australian economy $5 billion a year. 6.1 million Australians have high cholesterol

Every 10 minutes, an Australian will have a stroke. 434,000 Australians have an irregular heartbeat.

Lifestyle factors                                           

 Medical factors                                          

 Stroke risk factors that you cannot control             

  • Age 
  • Gender
  • Family history

 

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Lifestyle factors                                           

  • High blood pressure
  • High cholesterol
  • Smoking
  • Obesity or being overweight
  • Poor diet
  • Lack of exercise
  • Alcohol

Medical factors                                          

  • Transient ischaemic attack (TIA)
  • Irregular pulse (atrial fibrillation)
  • Diabetes
  • Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD)

 Stroke risk factors that you cannot control             

  • Age 
  • Gender
  • Family history

Learn More

Support and resources

Health Professionals

The Stroke Foundation develops the national stroke guidelines, measures and monitors the adherence to these guidelines via the national stroke audit, and develops education and resources for health professionals to support the delivery of best practice stroke care and reduce the evidence-practice gap.

Stroke Survivors & Carers

enableme is a free online resource and community developed with stroke survivors for stroke survivors and their families and supporters. With fact sheets and videos on a wide range of practical topics impacting daily life after stroke. Visit enableme.org.au for more information. 

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