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Unintelligible Text Messages Can Point to a Risk of Stroke

by Savitha C Muppala on December 27, 2012 at 4:23 PM

Scientists found that apart from symptoms such as inability to move limbs and disorientation, there could be another significant sign of an impending stroke.


Typing unintelligible texts or also called �dystextia', a recently-coined term by doctors to describe aphasia (language difficulty) could be a sign that something is going wrong in the brain.

In the respect, digital record can be a good way recognizing neurologic disease, especially among people who depend on the written rather than spoken communication.

Text messaging may be of great help in diagnosing a stroke and can actually be a pointer to our state of health. It could form part of the neurologist check list for symptoms of aphasia but there is a note of caution here - unintelligible texts should not be mistaken for aphasia when it is an old autocorrect problem. Many smart phones do have an �autocorrect' function which can substitute words erroneously to give an impression of a language disorder.

Language problems pointing to symptoms of stroke are unintelligible language output, problems with reading and comprehending texts.



Source: Medindia

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