Being bilingual may help stroke patients

Being bilingual may help stroke patients

Being bilingual may prove beneficial to your health, according to a new study.

Patients who are bilingual were two times more likely to have normal cognitive functions following a stroke compared to their monolingual counterparts, researchers found. The study, published in the journal Stroke, found that around 40 percent of bilingual patients in the Nizam’s Institute of Medical Sciences Stroke Registry had normal cognitive functions after a stroke compared to 20 percent of single language patients.

Bilingual patients performed better than monolingual patients post-stroke on tests that measured attention and ability to retrieve and organize information, according to the study. No difference was seen between monolingual and bilingual stroke patients in regard to experiencing aphasia, a disorder that causes trouble understanding speech, expressing oneself and difficulty reading and writing.

“Being bilingual helps lay down alternate pathways in our brains,” says Dr. Franco Campanella, a neurologist and medical director for the Comprehensive Stroke Center at Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, Ill. “This may provide us multiple highways of communication and cognition that aid in stroke recovery.”

Approximately 600 patients in the registry from 2006 to 2013 were assessed, and over 50 percent were bilingual. In order to ensure the results were not caused by bilingual individuals leading healthier lifestyles, the researchers considered other factors, including smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes and age.

According to the American Heart Association, someone in the United States has a stroke every 40 seconds, and someone dies of a stroke every four minutes. The Neurosciences Institute at Advocate Christ Medical Center sees six stroke patients per day, more than any center in the Chicagoland area.

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About the Author

Holly Brenza
Holly Brenza

Holly Brenza, health enews contributor, is a public affairs coordinator on the content team at Advocate Health Care and Aurora Health Care. She is a graduate of the University of Illinois at Chicago. In her free time, Holly enjoys reading, watching the White Sox and Blackhawks, playing with her dog, Bear and running her cats' Instagram account, @strangefurthings.