go to Allina Hospitals & Clinics home Careers | Contact Us | En Español | Employee Sign-in

Advanced Search

You are here: Conditions & Treatments > Heart Health Condition Center > Stroke

 
 

Effects of right-sided stroke

Stroke (cerebrovascular accident or CVA) usually affects one side of the brain. Movement and sensation for one side of the body is controlled by the opposite side of the brain.

If your stroke affected the right side of your brain, you will have problems with the left side of your body.

Anomia

You may not recognize faces or pictures of familiar people or objects.

Attention span

You may be unable to focus attention on a conversation or tasks for long periods of time.

Denial

You may deny that you had a stroke. Some people even deny that their paralyzed arm or leg belongs to them. They look at the paralyzed arm or leg and believe it belongs to someone else.

Neglect

You may ignore the left side of your body our your environment. This means you may not turn to look toward your left side or you may not recognize things that are on your left.

Perservation

You may have difficulty following instructions or answering many questions asked one right after the other. You may repeat answers or movement even though a new instruction was given or a new question asked.

Visual / spatial problems

You may have problems judging distance, size, position and rate of movement and how parts relate to the whole.


Related Links


 

Source: Allina Patient Education, Understanding Stroke: Information about Stroke and Recovery, third edition, ISBN 1-931876-13-4

First published: 02/01/2006
Last updated: 02/01/2006

Reviewed by: Allina Patient Education experts

 

 

back to top Back to Top

This site is presented for information only and is not intended to substitute for professional medical advice.
Allina®, the Allina logo, and Medformation® are registered trademarks of Allina Health System.
Presentation and Design ©2008 Allina Health System. All Rights Reserved.