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Man had strokes at ages 28 and 33, lives to warn others

WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) — A Kansas man thought he was too young to suffer a stroke, before he learned the hard way that strokes can affect anyone.

“I just woke up on the floor and thought maybe I blacked out,” Bill Ramsey said. “I was 28 years old. And I had the second one when I was 33 years old. The second time that I had one, I was completely blind.”

Not knowing what was wrong, he waited two days before going to the doctor.

“He told me he thought I’d had a stroke, and I was like, ‘Doc, I’m 33 years old. I didn’t have a stroke.’ And sure enough, it turns out that I did,” Ramsey said.

Even though it happened years ago, Ramsey still has side effects from the strokes.

“About a year of battling short-term memory loss, struggles to have conversations with people where I would lose my place. I’ve lost a lot of feeling on the left side. My face droops when I get tired,” Ramsey said. “I call them acceptable losses because it could have been so much worse.”

Ramsey didn’t know he needed urgent medical help, but quick intervention can minimize the long-term effects of strokes in young people.

“The more time that a stroke patient does not receive care in a hospital, it’s more damage that’s being done to them,” Heather Smart, American Heart Association, said. “And so we want people to be able to act quickly, whether that’s calling 911, getting someone to the emergency room as quickly as you can.”

Ramsey said he is proof that having a stroke does not have to mean your life is over.

“It’s not about your age. It’s not about your health,” he said. “There’s all kinds of things that can cause it, and you need to understand what those signs are so that you can help somebody.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, someone in the U.S. has a stroke every 40 seconds. That is almost 800,000 people a year.

The American Heart Association says to think F.A.S.T. when looking for signs of a stroke:

Recurring strokes, like Ramsey’s, are also relatively common. Nearly one in four strokes are in people who had one before.