Young Mom Overcomes Harrowing Stroke Battle
Stroke
July 05, 2024
Young Mom Overcomes Harrowing Stroke Battle
Stroke Survivor Tiffany Rubenkoenig and Her Physician Matthew Fiesta

Tiffany Rubenkoenig hummed along as guitar strumming, the call of the drums and the twangy notes of a harmonica filled the vehicle as she and others headed to the Garth Brooks concert. Suddenly, she felt extremely dizzy and hot — and it wasn’t from the sweltering Texas summer heat. She’d soon realize her life was in jeopardy, but thanks to individuals at two Texas Health Resources facilities, the 42-year-old mother of three is a grateful survivor.

Ryan Rubenkoenig, Tiffany’s husband, vividly remembers that summer evening. “We had no idea, but that’s when our nightmare began.”


Watch Tiffany’s Story

Knowing the signs, taking immediate action

Encouraging friends to attend the concert without them, Ryan found Tiffany slumped over in her seat and as she attempted to speak, her words slurred together, and part of her face began to droop. Immediately, he knew she was having a stroke.

After calling 911 and driving to Texas Health Arlington Memorial, several exams confirmed their fears. Less than 20 minutes from the onset of her stroke symptoms, Rubenkoenig was given clot-busting medication to break up the clot in her brain.

Feeling better, the Rubenkoenigs were looking forward to her hospital discharge, even solidifying their upcoming trip to California. “Then, my head started hurting, and I told Ryan to get the doctor,” she said.

Receiving specialized stroke care

Minutes later, Rubenkoenig stopped breathing, going into cardiac arrest — twice. To survive, she needed specialized care at a comprehensive stroke center. Rubenkoenig was taken via helicopter to Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital Fort Worth — the only advanced comprehensive stroke center in Tarrant County certified by The Joint Commission. In fact, Texas Health Fort Worth cares for the highest number of stroke patients* in North Texas.

Matthew Fiesta, M.D., an interventional neuroradiologist on the Texas Health Fort Worth medical staff, was preparing for her arrival.

Fiesta, who serves as co-medical director of the hospital’s stroke program, received an alert on his phone, along with Rubenkoenig’s vital signs and CT scan from Texas Health Arlington Memorial.

Fiesta performed an angiogram and the brain imaging showed that instead of two arteries supplying blood and oxygen to her brainstem, Rubenkoenig only had one.

“Unfortunately, Mrs. Rubenkoenig somehow injured, or dissected her one and only artery,” Fiesta said. “It caused major blockage and lead to her massive stroke.”

Fiesta began antiplatelet treatment to eliminate future blockages in Rubenkoenig’s vertebral artery and to help it heal.

Recovering from stroke, thriving after therapy

Rubenkoenig lost the ability to speak and move on her own, spending nearly three weeks in Texas Health Fort Worth. Her patient journey involved care across the Metroplex for several months, eventually leading her back to Texas Health Fort Worth — this time for vision therapy.

“Completing reading and mobility tasks, along with driving simulations, we help neurological patients increase their visual processing speed, depth perception, and their hand-to-eye coordination,” said Robin Milroy, an occupational therapist at Texas Health Fort Worth.

“The end goal is to get individuals back to enjoying life independently, whether they’re at school, work, or simply participating in leisure activities with loved ones.”

Rubenkoenig is back to enjoying her independence – being a mom to three boys, walking her dog, and even starting a blog, which she uses to pray for patients with strokes and helping connect people to resources.

“Her determination, her fight, her faith — Tiffany never gave up,” Ryan said. “Not only that, the level of care we received couldn’t have been any better than it was. God was looking over us.”

Call 9-1-1 immediately if you or a loved one is experiencing stroke symptoms.

Learn more about stroke care at Texas Health.

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