Renzullo suffers series of strokes

WINSTED — Selectman Michael Renzullo has had a number of medical scares during the past two weeks, having suffered a series of strokes that began last Tuesday, Sept. 14, during a Democratic caucus at Town Hall. After being treated and released from Hartford Hospital last week, the selectman was back in the hospital this week after suffering from further complications.

Renzullo, 35, initially felt symptoms of a stroke during the Sept. 17 caucus in the Probate Room at Town Hall. “I was about to explain an idea and I started slurring my speech and losing my train of thought,� the selectman said by phone from his hospital bed Tuesday. “My hand went numb and Lisa [Smith, selectman] immediately recognized the symptoms. She ran down to the police station and called an ambulance. Officer Mike Roy came up.�

In the meantime, Renzullo walked with fellow Selectman George Closson down to the ground level in front of Town Hall, where he sat on the curb on Main Street. “I regained control of my hand, and rather than have the ambulance drive, I had George drive me up to the Winsted Health Center.�

Dr. Gregg Grinspan evaluated Renzullo, as his symptoms continued to subside, and sent him to Charlotte Hungerford Hospital for further evaluation.

“As I was sitting there at Charlotte I had another episode,� Renzullo said. “So they called LifeStar and I was flown to Hartford Hospital. By the time I got there, I was in full-on stroke mode. It was bizarre. I knew what I wanted to say, but gibberish was coming out. It was so ridiculously frustrating. I couldn’t control what I was saying.�

Doctors at Hartford Hospital initially treated Renzullo with blood thinners and by Friday, Sept. 17, he was being released. Later in the day, however, his symptoms returned. He returned to the emergency room at Charlotte Hungerford Hospital on Saturday, and was sent by ambulance back to Hartford Hospital, where doctors worked to get his levels of Coumadin, a blood-thinning medication, raised.

Renzullo said doctors found an arterial dissection in his brain, in which a blood vessel is torn and then clots to heal itself. During his intial trip to Hartford Hospital via Lifestar, Renzullo received a tissue plasminogen activator, an emergency treatment that dissolves blood clots. The main clot was broken up, but the smaller pieces caused a series of strokes, which was treated with Coumadin therapy.

Renzullo was unaware, however,  that he was ingesting a diet that was interfering with the anti-clotting agent. “They've had me drinking Ensure [a dietary supplement] while I've been here, which has high levels of vitamin K,â€� he said.

Vitamin K is found in leafy green vegetables and is known for helping the clotting process.

 â€œAll the time I’ve been here, they’ve been wondering why my Coumadin levels haven’t been rising and I’ve been drinking Ensure.â€� Renzullo said a nutritionist at the hospital prescribed the diet to him. A nurse noted the problem, and he was taken off the drink on Monday.

Renzullo said young patients who experience arterial dissections generally have heart or serious drug problems with substances such as cocaine or methamphetamine. “I don’t do any drugs like that whatsoever and my heart’s been fine,� he said.

Renzullo said he is happy to be alive and he hopes his good fortune will continue. “With any luck I should be out of here in a day,� he said Tuesday. “But if it takes till the next day or two I’m not going to complain. Going through the experience of having a stroke is just nuts.�

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