Mail - Upper Yarra Star Mail - 3rd August 2021

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Upper Yarra

Tuesday, 3 August, 2021

Mail

Call to get Covid vaccine

Businesses open doors once again

Ranges trio on way to big time

Women empowering women

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A Star News Group Publication

Phone: 5957 3700 Trades and Classifieds: 1300 666 808

12496494-HC22-21

Hope after stroke By Jed Lanyon

Launching Place resident Alex Wright suffered a stroke at the age of 27. suffered a near fatal stroke. “They said ‘you’ve had a stroke’ and I thought what does that mean? I had never heard of it before,” he said. He spent four weeks in intensive care and remained in hospital for a further three weeks. He then lived in a rehabilitation facility for three months and then spent a year attending outpatient rehab. He was told he would never walk again and

Picture: STEWART CHAMBERS

that he’d spend his life in nursing care, but here he stands nearly fully recovered while attending the gym each day to keep his body active. And despite making a much better than expected recovery, Alex isn’t the same person he was prior to his medical episode. “I’m really good now. I still have my problems, I still limp a little bit. My knee hasn’t come fully back yet. “People think that my stroke must have

been minor, but about a third of the right side of my brain is now dead forever, so it was a major stroke and one that you don’t usually recover from.” The doctors told him it was a miracle that he was still alive. “My stroke was in the medial prefrontal area, which is basically for personality and motor control. Continued page 4

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Five years on from suffering a devastating stroke, a Launching Place man has recovered and now dedicates his life to helping rehabilitate others who are on the same journey. At just 27 years of age, Alex Wright was on his daily run with his dogs when he suffered a rare form of stroke that rendered him unconscious in the middle of a road. Speaking to Star Mail as part of National Stroke Week (1-8 August), he recalled the day that would change his life forever. “I was running, probably about 30 kilometres a week. It was Good Friday and I went really hard because I was trying to break my record,” he said. “I noticed that my left arm dropped the dog lead and the dog ran off. I thought, that’s kind of weird and I couldn’t pick up the lead, my arm was flaccid. “Five or 10 seconds later my legs went completely limp and I collapsed in the middle of the road. I couldn’t speak, I was out of it.” While for some, having a stroke can be a result of an unhealthy lifestyle, for Alex it was a case of being too healthy as he pushed himself to beat his personal best time sprinting with his dog. And if it wasn’t for the quick response of a passer-by who called an ambulance under the belief that Alex was drunk, the stroke would have proved fatal. “She would have heard me slurring my words and saw that I couldn’t walk, so I probably looked like a really drunk person,” he said, having since reconnected with the person who saved him. Two weeks later, Alex awoke from a coma without the ability to speak or move, having

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