Everyday activities increase the risk of stroke, experts say
Doing yoga, talking on the phone, swimming freestyle and painting the ceiling increase the risk of stroke, neurologists said yesterday.
These everyday activities could overstretch or compress blood vessels in the neck, blocking blood flow to the brain and inducing ischaemic strokes, Chinese University neurologist Yannie Soo Oi-yan said.
Other dangerous activities include sleeping in one sideways position over many months, driving too fast, boxing and archery.
'Strokes related to excessive neck extension or rotation during sports and work are not rare,' Dr Soo said.
There are two kinds of stroke: ischaemic, when the brain receives too little blood due to a blood clot; and haemorrhagic, when there is bleeding. In ischaemic strokes, the neck bends at an acute or awkward angle, compressing or overstretching and tearing the arteries, leading to clots.
Smoking, which hardens blood vessels, and high blood pressure increase the risk of ischaemic stroke. While ischaemic strokes account for less than 5 per cent of all strokes in people older than 50, world figures show they make up 5 to 10 per cent in under-50s.