A year after losing her singing voice to a stroke, Boston singer Valerie Giglio sat on the stage during a music showcase and sang Charlie Chaplin’s “Smile.”
“That song has so much meaning to me because no matter how bad it gets, you have to keep smiling and push your way through it,” said Giglio.
Swift disaster and slow recovery
Giglio, 42, experienced a brain stem stroke in 2014 after she turned her head to shut off her alarm clock and tore both vertebral arteries in her neck. Clots formed which went to her brain and caused a stroke.
“I lost my singing voice in a flash and had to learn to walk again and use my arm again,” said Giglio, who did therapy at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Boston followed by months of outpatient therapy. Extreme fatigue and dizziness became major setbacks. “I could only do a couple of things a day, even after I was significantly recovered,” she said. “It’s a lifelong process, but the bulk of my recovery happened in the first year.”
Intensive care goals
“In most cases, therapy starts within 24 hours of a stroke survivor being admitted to the hospital,” said Angie Reimer, a Fort Wayne, Indiana occupational therapist. “Typically after a stroke, physical, occupational and speech therapies are ordered,” said Reimer. “Therapists will make a recommendation on whether the patient needs to go to a rehab center or can go home.”
If the patient is sent to a rehab center, they’ll have therapy three hours a day with different therapists who specialize in each level of care. “The main focus at the acute rehab level is getting people moving better — getting them to walk a little bit so they’re mobile,” said Reimer. “The other big focus is getting them to where they can get dressed, get in a shower and feed themselves. It’s those basic things they need to do in order to go home.”
An ongoing process
Once a patient leaves a rehab center, they may do outpatient therapy in a clinic two or three days a week. “Now the focus is on getting back to normal life,” said Reimer. “The long-term goal is living independently and returning to the things that are really important to them.”
For Giglio that means singing.
“I’ve had a lot wonderful experiences after stroke and want to discover more,” she said. “Now I’m doing everything because tomorrow is never promised.”