Phineas Harper Profile picture
Jun 9 8 tweets 4 min read Read on X
This week I had two strokes in my 30s. I realise it's not cool to talk about medical stuff in British culture but I am going to share this story anyway because what I have learned over the last few days in hospital could potentially save a life. 🧵 1/8
On Thursday at an exhibition opening I suddenly lost control of my arm and hand. I stumbled outside and called 111 who dispatched an ambulance. By the time the paramedics arrived I was regaining control but they took me to hospital, blue lights, blazing fearing a stoke. 2/8 Image
I was taken straight to the resuscitation wing where a stroke doctor and their team examined me. I was given medication, a CT scan and, though I now could partially move and feel my fingers, was told I would be kept overnight for constant monitoring and an MRI in the morning. 3/8 Image
Two days, two heart ultrasounds, an MRI and multiple blood tests later, the neurologists had figured it out. I have a hole in my heart just large enough to allow micro blood clots, normally filtered by the lungs, to move to the wrong side of my heart and up to my brain. 4/8 Image
The solution is to plug the hole using a clever "umbrella" inserted into my heart via an arm vein. It sounded scary but the neurologist assured me it was a very safe and common procedure they could do "with their eyes closed" (although I hope they keep them open tbh). 5/8
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The bombshell is that all this is fairly common. Lots of people have these small holes which can cause micro strokes but few realise. Since posting about all this, several people have told me about near-identical episodes of mysteriously losing limb control. 6/8 Image
The danger is that a lot of us don't follow it up, especially if the loss of control was just brief. I myself lost movement in my arm for 5 minutes when 18 while living in Nigeria but shrugged it off. The MRI shows a.scar in my brain which could have been that very incident. 7/8 Image
I am now out of hospital and on anti-coagulant meds until they can do the heart opp. But the scoop is this: if you lose, or have in the past lost, control of a limb even for just a few minutes get it checked out! It could mean there's a hole in your heart. 🫀8/8 Image

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More from @PhinHarper

Nov 2, 2021
I have respect for those who wear red poppies at this time of year. I wear a white poppy for six main reasons. Thread. 1/
1. I believe it is essential to fully understand and recognise that 90% of those killed in war are civilians, not the military staff which I believe the white poppy more effectively symbolises than the red. 2/
2. The British Legion do great work but it is work that fundamentally should be done by government, not charity. I would happily pay more tax to ensure veterans were better cared for, but cannot volunterarly support a charity which reduces the financial burden of waging war. 3/
Read 9 tweets
Sep 6, 2020
This @XRebellionUK tension structure blockading the billionaire press site is genius and is, I think, the contemporary face of High Tech architecture. I'd argued #XR are the last remaining authentic High Tech architects. Hear me out. 1/7
High Tech had its roots in the eco-techno pioneering of practitioners like Frei Otto, Cedric Price and Buckminster Fuller — saving Spaceship Earth by doing more with less while enjoying a rich cultural life was the name of the game. Architecture should be fun and light. 2/7
This "High Tech" spindly architecture infused with gregarious eco optimism is taken up in earnest by Foster, Piano, Rogers, Grimshaw and others whose work is charismatic, pre-fabricated, and doesn't weigh much. 3/7
Read 7 tweets
Nov 21, 2019
A thread of things that the #LabourManifesto could mean for architecture as I work through it!
1. The Green Industrial Revolution will be huge for construction and design. Labour identify the energy use buildings as the largest cause of emissions and the promised roll out of heat pumps and solar thermal panels means nationwide upgrade and retrofit projects.
2. To develop the skills and knowledge needed to meet the climate emergency, Labour are promising 3% of GDP going into R&D. This could be a game changer for ecological construction techniques which sufferer from a deficit of research investment across the sector.
Read 15 tweets

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