When single mom Hayley Clark found her 10-year-old daughter
collapsed on the bathroom floor, she never suspected that a stroke was the
cause of her “healthy” daughter’s medical scare.
Gracie Whittick, 10, suffered a stroke on Sept. 26 as she
was getting ready for school, her mom told South West News Service (SWNS), a
British news agency.
"It was all completely out of the blue. There were no
warning signs at all, she was fine before. She was getting ready for school and
the next second she was on the floor,” she recalled.
"It happened in seconds. I thought she had fainted on
the floor and I had to get her to come around. The right side of her face was
drooping. She couldn’t lift her arms, move her arms or legs,” she continued,
noting she immediately called an ambulance.
Doctors at Queen Elizabeth Hospital King’s Lynn in Norfolk,
England, later told confirmed a blood clot on the left side of Gracie’s brain
had caused the stroke. The young girl underwent a three-hour surgery to remove
96 percent of the clot. It’s unclear at this time what caused the clot.
"The whole thing is really surreal. Doctors still don't
know why it happened; she had a heart scan and that has come back as normal,”
she said.
The stroke impacted the right side of her body. The
10-year-old, who is right-handed, now has trouble using her right arm. She’s
also struggling with memory issues. She began walking again recently, but tires
quickly and will sometimes resort to a wheelchair, her mother said.
"She keeps getting really confused and she is getting
frustrated with it all,” she said.
“The whole thing is really surreal. To me, a stroke is an
old people thing. It isn’t something that happens to a healthy 10-year-old
girl,” Clark added, noting Gracie enjoys dancing and gymnastics.
Though relatively uncommon, pediatric strokes can and do
occur. According to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, pediatric stroke
affects an estimated 12 in 100,000 children under the age of 18. However, there may be more cases of pediatric
stroke as it is “thought to be frequently undiagnosed or misdiagnosed,” says a
2011 medical review on pediatric stroke.
Children most at risk are those with sickle cell anemia or
congenital heart defects and other conditions.
“Previously healthy children who are found to have hidden
disorders such as narrow blood vessels or a tendency to form blood clots
easily,” are also at risk, according to the hospital.
Gracie is expected to recover but will likely remain in the
hospital for another six weeks, SWNS reported.
“She doesn't remember anything, I don't think she
understands what happened. She is only 10,” Clark said. "It has been a
shock to all of us. It has just been a hideous time. But she has been so lucky
with this, it all could've been a lot worse."
https://www.foxnews.com/health/girl-suffers-stroke-recovering
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