His score of 2 on the NIHSS indicated the possibility of a minor stroke, which, in turn, prompted a brain scan that showed the man had indeed suffered a mild stroke. This is not a unique nor isolated case of what doctors are calling "dystextia". The Archives of Neurology lists other cases that spawned medical evaluation from signs of incoherent text messages.
This picture is for entertainment purpose only, and not a diagnostic example. |
Considering incoherent texts as a sign of stroke could prove useful to medical professionals. In addition to diagnosing a patient, we may be able to use the time stamps from texts to determine the precise timing of a stroke’s onset, unless, of course, autocorrect has masked the symptom of dystextia.
How about that!