Author Topic: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke  (Read 1765 times)

Dobro

  • Prime Time Player
  • Posts: 647
  • Triple Pope
    • View Profile
Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« on: March 06, 2006, 10:35:25 am »
Only 44-years old...

The Link
Lighten up, Francis.

UpTooLate

  • Should Have Quit 500 Posts Ago
  • Posts: 1089
    • View Profile
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2006, 11:27:37 am »
Thoughts and prayers to him and his family.  Strokes are unbelievably fucking cruel.  It should be a wake up call to many including myself who are dragging around too many .lbs and should be giving more attention to proper diet/exercise.
"Go with Christ" - Eric "The Dawg" Cartman

homer

  • Pope
  • Posts: 6509
    • View Profile
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2006, 11:44:29 am »
Quote:

Only 44-years old...

The Link





Hate to say it, but you gotta wonder whats causing strokes in a 44 year old.
Oye. Vamos, vamos.

JaneDoe

  • Contributor
  • Pope
  • Posts: 8603
  • Missing in Action
    • View Profile
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #3 on: March 06, 2006, 12:03:15 pm »
I had a stroke at age 32.  YES 32!!!!!  White, female, non-smoker, no clogging of arteries, no aneurisms (they ran a tube up my leg artery to my brain and injected dye and took pictures), no family history.  The doctors finally figured out it was birth control pills.

I was unable to move my left side for about 15 minutes, very slurred speech, and laughed trough the entire thing.  There was no pain. I fully recovered by the time the ambulance got there and have had no lasting after effects.
"My hammy is a little tight. I wish I was like Ausmus. He's Jewish and isn't allowed to have a pulled hamstring."

S.P. Rodriguez

  • Key Member of the Conspiracy
  • Posts: 2932
    • View Profile
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #4 on: March 06, 2006, 12:04:49 pm »
Quote:

Quote:

Only 44-years old...

The Link





Hate to say it, but you gotta wonder whats causing strokes in a 44 year old.





WTF?  Are you and BizidyDizidy friends? Unbelievable...

Here's what I was thinking of when I heard:
Quote:

What risk factors for stroke can be controlled or treated?

    *
      High blood pressure ? High blood pressure (140/90 mm Hg or higher) is the most important risk factor for stroke.  It usually has no specific symptoms and no early warning signs. That?s why everybody should have their blood pressure checked regularly.
    *
      Tobacco use ? Cigarette smoking is a major, preventable risk factor for stroke. The nicotine and carbon monoxide in tobacco smoke reduce the amount of oxygen in your blood. They also damage the walls of blood vessels, making clots more likely to form. Using some kinds of birth control pills combined with smoking cigarettes greatly increases stroke risk.  If you smoke, get help to quit NOW!
    * Diabetes mellitus ? Diabetes is defined as a fasting plasma glucose (blood sugar) of 126 mg/dL or more measured on two occasions. While diabetes is treatable, having it still increases a person's risk of stroke. Many people with diabetes also have high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol and are overweight. This increases their risk even more. If you have diabetes, work closely with your doctor to manage it.
    * Carotid or other artery disease ? The carotid arteries in your neck supply blood to your brain. A carotid artery narrowed by fatty deposits from atherosclerosis (plaque buildups in artery walls) may become blocked by a blood clot. Carotid artery disease is also called carotid artery stenosis.

      People with peripheral artery disease have a higher risk of carotid artery disease, which raises their risk of stroke. Peripheral artery disease is the narrowing of blood vessels carrying blood to leg and arm muscles. It's caused by fatty buildups of plaque in artery walls.
    * Atrial fibrillation ? This heart rhythm disorder raises the risk for stroke. The heart's upper chambers quiver instead of beating effectively, which can let the blood pool and clot. If a clot breaks off, enters the bloodstream and lodges in an artery leading to the brain, a stroke results.
    * Other heart disease ? People with coronary heart disease or heart failure have a higher risk of stroke than those with hearts that work normally. Dilated cardiomyopathy (an enlarged heart), heart valve disease and some types of congenital heart defects also raise the risk of stroke.
    * Transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) ? TIAs are "warning strokes" that produce stroke-like symptoms but no lasting damage. Recognizing and treating TIAs can reduce your risk of a major stroke. It's very important to recognize the warning signs of a TIA or stroke. Call 9-1-1 to get medical help immediately if they occur.
    * Certain blood disorders ? A high red blood cell count thickens the blood and makes clots more likely. This raises the risk of stroke. Doctors may treat this problem by removing blood cells or prescribing "blood thinners."

      Sickle cell disease (also called sickle cell anemia) is a genetic disorder that mainly affects African Americans. "Sickled" red blood cells are less able to carry oxygen to the body's tissues and organs. They also tend to stick to blood vessel walls, which can block arteries to the brain and cause a stroke.
    * High blood cholesterol ? A high level of total cholesterol in the blood (240 mg/dL or higher) is a major risk factor for heart disease, which raises your risk of stroke. Recent studies show that high levels of  LDL ("bad") cholesterol (greater than 100 mg/dL) and triglycerides (blood fats, 150 mg/dL or higher) increase the risk of stroke in people with previous coronary heart disease, ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA). Low levels (less than 40 mg/dL for men; less than 50 mg/dL for women) of HDL ("good") cholesterol also may raise stroke risk.
    * Physical inactivity and obesity ? Being inactive, obese or both can increase your risk of high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, diabetes, heart disease and stroke. So go on a brisk walk, take the stairs, and do whatever you can to make your life more active. Try to get a total of at least 30 minutes of activity on most or all days.
    * Excessive alcohol ? Drinking an average of more than one alcoholic drink a day for women or more than two drinks a day for men can raise blood pressure and may increase risk for stroke.
    * Some illegal drugs ? Intravenous drug abuse carries a high risk of stroke. Cocaine use has been linked to strokes and heart attacks. Some have been fatal even in first-time users.

What are the risk factors for stroke you can't change?

    * Increasing age ? People of all ages, including children, have strokes. But the older you are, the greater your isk for stroke.
    * Sex (gender) ? Stroke is more common in men than in women. In most age groups, more men than women will have a stroke in a given year. However, women account for more than half of all stroke deaths. Women who are pregnant have a higher stroke risk. So do women taking birth control pills who also smoke or have high blood pressure or other risk factors.
    * Heredity (family history) and race ? Your stroke risk is greater if a parent, grandparent, sister or brother has had a stroke. African Americans have a much higher risk of death from a stroke than Caucasians do. This is partly because blacks have higher risks of high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity.
    * Prior stroke or heart attack ? Someone who has had a stroke is at much higher risk of having another one. If you've had a heart attack, you're at higher risk of having a stroke, too.





From this
 web page
"If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed."

"If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you; that is the principal difference between a dog and a man. "

-Mark Twain

MusicMan

  • High Order of the Ferret
  • *****
  • Posts: 25931
  • Thanks for 2015
    • View Profile
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #5 on: March 06, 2006, 12:21:49 pm »
Quote:

Quote:

Only 44-years old...

The Link





Hate to say it, but you gotta wonder whats causing strokes in a 44 year old.





Even if said in jest, one vote here for "not cool".
I believe there ought to be a constitutional amendment outlawing AstroTurf and the designated hitter. I believe in the sweet spot, soft-core pornography, opening your presents Christmas morning rather than Christmas Eve and I believe in long, slow, deep, torture of Bud Selig.

BudGirl

  • Contributor
  • Illuminati
  • Posts: 17776
  • Brad Ausmus' Slave
    • View Profile
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #6 on: March 06, 2006, 12:33:09 pm »
Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Only 44-years old...

The Link





Hate to say it, but you gotta wonder whats causing strokes in a 44 year old.




Even if said in jest, one vote here for "not cool".




Strokes are never funny, whatever the reason.  I vote "not cool" also.

Plus, it seems as though his was a bleeding stroke, those are beyond horrible.
''I just did an interview with someone I like more than you. I used a lot of big words on him. I don't have anything left for you.'' --Brad Ausmus

Well behaved women rarely make history.

JimR

  • Contributor
  • High Order of the Ferret
  • *****
  • Posts: 29345
    • View Profile
    • McGinnis, Lochridge & Kilgore, LLP
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #7 on: March 06, 2006, 12:44:40 pm »
another vote here for not cool or funny.
Often wrong, but never in doubt.

David in Jackson

  • Should Have Quit 500 Posts Ago
  • Posts: 2465
    • View Profile
Re: Kirby Puckett not doing well after stroke
« Reply #8 on: March 06, 2006, 01:07:53 pm »
A recent photo (scroll down):
The Link

and a family history of heart disease.

I'd look there first before I starting dropping hints.
"I literally love Justin Verlander." -- Jose Altuve