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SOS! Woman begins speaking with Swedish accent after heart attack in rare case of ‘foreign accent syndrome’

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Georgina Gailey, 60, fears her new distinctive Nordic accent

A British woman who developed a Swedish accent despite never having visited the country is appealing for help to regain her normal voice.

Georgina Gailey, 60, fears her new, distinctively Nordic accent is “stuck forever” after her way of speaking changed during a phone call with her sister three years ago.

After rushing to hospital fearing she had suffered a stroke, doctors diagnosed her with foreign accent syndrome (FAS), an extraordinarily rare condition which Ms Gailey believes is linked to a previous heart attack she suffered.

This means she is only one of a few people who have ever experienced this speech disorder, which usually occurs as a complication of a stroke or head injury.

The mother-of-two, from Hillingdon in Middlesex, says she is now frequently asked if she is from Sweden and now pronounces “yeah” as “ha”.

Georgina Gailey, 60, fears her new distinctive Nordic accent is “stuck forever” after her way of speaking changed during a phone call with her sister three years ago.

Recalling her ordeal, Ms Gailey said:

Recalling her ordeal, Ms Gailey said: “It’s changed my life, a big part of me is missing. I used to speak very well and now I speak like a Swede. I say ‘ja’ instead of ‘yeah’.”

Recalling her ordeal, she said: ‘It’s changed my life, a big part of me is missing.

‘I used to speak very well and now I sound like a Swede. I say “ja” instead of “yes.”

‘At first I didn’t realize how different I was until I heard the answering machine message.

“It’s very different. People ask me where I’m from and when I tell them I’m English they laugh. They think I’m Swedish.”

He added: “When people laugh, I smile superficially, but inside I feel sad.”

‘I had suffered a heart attack a few months earlier. I was getting better and was getting ready to go back to work.

‘One night, I was FaceTiming with my sister and she noticed I was mixing up my words.

‘I went to the hospital and they thought I had suffered a stroke. They kept me in the hospital for two weeks and then diagnosed me.’

While stroke is the most common cause of fetal alcohol syndrome, it can also occur after trauma to the brain, bleeding in the brain, or a brain tumor.

Other causes reported in medical journals include multiple sclerosis and conversion disorder, when someone experiences temporary physical symptoms, such as blindness or paralysis.

After going to hospital fearing she had suffered a stroke, doctors diagnosed her with foreign accent syndrome (FAS), an extraordinarily rare condition, which Ms Gailey believes is linked to a previous heart attack she suffered.

After going to hospital fearing she had suffered a stroke, doctors diagnosed her with foreign accent syndrome (FAS), an extraordinarily rare condition, which Ms Gailey believes is linked to a previous heart attack she suffered.

Ms. Gailey said she has visited several neurologists in the hope of regaining her original accent, but fears she may be

Ms Gailey said she has visited several neurologists in the hope of regaining her original accent, but fears she may be “stuck” with it “forever”.

Cases have been documented around the world, including cases of people changing their accent from pure Japanese to Japanese with a Korean accent and from British English to English with a French accent.

But IIn some cases no clear cause has been identified. Fetal alcohol syndrome, still poorly understood, can last for months or years and sometimes even be permanent.

No further details about his diagnosis were shared.

Ms Gailey said she has visited several neurologists in the hope of regaining her original accent, but fears she may have it “forever”.

She said: “I don’t know if I’ll have that accent forever. I don’t feel good thinking that I might stay like that forever.”

‘My poor family has to put up with me. The longer I have the accent, the more likely it is to stick.

‘My brain will get used to speaking like this. It’s strange because if I sing, I sound English.

“It changes depending on how many hours I sleep. It’s very strange.”

She hopes that by speaking out she can raise awareness about FAS and encourage more research into the disease.

Foreign Accent Syndrome: What Do We Know?

Foreign accent syndrome is a rare disorder in which the patient speaks with an accent that is different from his or her natural speaking style.

It is usually the result of a head or brain injury, with stroke being the most common cause.

Fetal alcohol syndrome can also occur after a brain injury, a brain hemorrhage, or a brain tumor. Other causes, such as multiple sclerosis and conversion disorder, have also been described.

It has only been recorded 150 times worldwide since its discovery in 1907.

Fetal alcohol syndrome has been documented in cases around the world, including accent shifts from Japanese to Korean, British English to French, and Spanish to Hungarian.

It causes those affected to pronounce vowels differently, move their tongue and jaw differently when speaking to produce a different sound, and even substitute words for others they would not normally use.

In some cases no clear cause has been identified.

Foreign accent syndrome can last for months or years, or sometimes it can even be permanent.

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