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Kay Russell, English Woman, Left With French Accent After Migraine Attack (VIDEO)


First Posted: 09/15/10 03:09 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:40 PM ET

(AP) LONDON — A woman from a village in southwestern England says that a severe migraine attack left her speaking with what sounds like a French accent – a striking example of a rare syndrome that neuroscientists say can leave lifelong locals sounding like they come from thousands of miles away.

Kay Russell appeared on the BBC earlier this week, speaking in a hesitant, husky voice, drawing out her vowels with an accent which sounded roughly French, or occasionally Eastern European. The broadcaster also showed a video of Russell before the change, in which she speaks to the camera in chirpy southern English accent.

Russell shook her head and smiled sadly as the video played.

"When I see that, I see the person I used to be," the 49-year-old said. "It's not my voice I miss. I would love to have my own voice back, but it goes way, way, way beyond my voice."


It wasn't exactly clear what happened to Russell in January when the migraine attack struck – a number for her could not be located and there was no immediate response to an attempt to reach her through her previous employer. But the BBC said her condition seems to correspond to Foreign Accent Syndrome, known only in a few dozen cases across the world.

Previous cases have included people whose newly found accents sounded German, Spanish, Welsh, Italian or Irish. In 2009, British media carried reports of an English man who woke up from brain surgery speaking with what one newspaper described as a perfect Irish lilt. In 2006 a woman from the northern England city of Newcastle reportedly swapped her Geordie accent for a Jamaican one following a stroke.

The rare disorder doesn't mean that patients somehow become foreign – in many cases, those diagnosed with the condition have never had any significant exposure to the country where their new accent appears to comes from.

Brain trauma or strokes often affect victims' speech, a condition known as dysarthria. In many people, this is expressed as difficulty articulating words or sentences, but in rare cases the speech impediment can be expressed as a foreign accent.

Sophie Scott, a researcher at University College London's Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, said that what sounds like a foreign different accent can be the product of a simple shift in the way people move their mouths or emphasize certain syllables.

"People might put little vowel sounds in their speech, so they might-a sound-a little-a like-a this – that's read by English speakers as being an Italian accent," she said.

The BBC suggested that Russell had yet to make her peace with her new way of speaking, noting that she had lost her job and her confidence. Russell jokingly told the broadcaster she was considering placing an ad in the paper's lost-and-found section.

"Maybe at the end of the day someone could find me," she said.

Scott said that kind of attitude wasn't unusual, describing one Foreign Accent Syndrome patient who felt more comfortable in a London hotel lobby than in her own hometown, where well-meaning strangers often embarrassed her by asking if she needed help getting around. Scott said that feeling of alienation was part of what of what made the condition so unique.

"It's not only that you don't sound like who you are," she said. "You don't sound like the others around you either."

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(AP) LONDON — A woman from a village in southwestern England says that a severe migraine attack left her speaking with what sounds like a French accent – a striking example of a rare syndr...
(AP) LONDON — A woman from a village in southwestern England says that a severe migraine attack left her speaking with what sounds like a French accent – a striking example of a rare syndr...
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05:49 PM on 09/20/2010
This is my theory: Our souls, our spirits, are pure energy, which communicate to our brains. Pain is also energy and migraines are extremely painful. Sometimes the energy required to help us endure pain can be so draining that more energy is needed, just to help us cope. Perhaps the energy she needed to handle this migraine came directly from her own soul.

The pain from the migraine disrupted her soul's energy & when the migraine was over, her soul, which probably has past life experiences, was left confused. Perhaps it remembered only the language or accent it once spoke in a more recent past life, which was probably French. Then when her spirit communicated to her brain, the language or accent the brain heard and accepted was French, which is why she now speaks with a French accent.

Future migraines could someday trigger her soul to reveal more of it's past life memories to her. Or it could return her to normal. Much depends on how far apart her migraine attacks are & whether her energy levels are strong enough to withstand another migraine attack.
09:06 AM on 09/20/2010
The French have always been a bit of a headache.
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valluhree
A progressive in Texas.
03:17 AM on 09/20/2010
How does someone lose a job because of this??
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
10:46 PM on 09/19/2010
And now her french accent is causing migraines in others..this thing could spread faster than H1-N1 and we'll all sound like Monty Python sketch.
01:02 AM on 09/18/2010
Wow. Most people who commented on this article joked about it?! I wonder if they would say the same thing if they suffered the syndrome. Smh...
09:08 AM on 09/20/2010
Je pense que, non.

Now, where did I leave the aspirin bottle?
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
09:58 PM on 09/17/2010
"Foreign Accent Syndrome"? Oh come now.....LOL.
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syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
04:28 AM on 09/20/2010
That is a real disorder.
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Lahonda
Bynocent Instander
08:19 PM on 09/17/2010
French? Headache? Usually.
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richnerd
Retired Imagineer, soon to be a goat herder in NM
06:58 PM on 09/17/2010
I wonder if this is the reason for Sarah Palin's ability to speak Grizzly.
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WoodsideCraig
Author of the blog "The Weiler Psi"
05:02 PM on 09/17/2010
This is not what a brain damage caused speech impediment sounds like. That's the weird thing. Foreign accents originate from shaping vowels and consonants differently, not from a lack of motor ability. The theory that's presented here is pure bunk. She is completely articulate.

It's as if the brain other language abilities that are stored, but not accessed normally, although the mechanism for this is unknown.
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syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
04:42 AM on 09/20/2010
Her syntax and morphology sounds a little off to me. It is not just her phonology.
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Mondayboy
Rebel with a cause
09:22 AM on 09/17/2010
I had a powerful burritto last week...and have been speaking with a mexican accent. The doctors cannot help me.
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Ramkshrestha
Welcome to Nepal - the birthplace of Buddha
07:58 AM on 09/17/2010
This is not only the case. We need to squeeze the broadening gap between theory and practice to go really to the wonderful world.
02:53 AM on 09/17/2010
Moral of the story: Don't ignore migraines, seek professional help.
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BLACKCAT66
A realist with a rich inner life
11:32 AM on 09/16/2010
This is just soooo....neat! I mean I feel sorry for the migraines that she suffers from I know they can be very debilitating but I'm not sure why she lost her job over it. Hey could be worse, she could have ended up with a Jersey City accent ;-)
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TexasDem0
USMC Vietnam vet,Veteran for Peace
05:32 PM on 09/16/2010
Dat ain't funny.
08:00 PM on 09/19/2010
(using Jersey City accent) Forget about it!
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yannb
Noblesse oblige
04:16 AM on 09/16/2010
This kind of oddities always happen to the Brits or the Americans. Like abduction by aliens, UFO encounters, religious visions, etc... Never heard of a French woman having migraines and suddenly picking up an English accent. That's just too ludicrous.
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deluk
disgusted.
11:53 AM on 09/16/2010
religious visions?
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StoryTime
Running on plenty/Oh j'cours toute seule ,)
12:47 AM on 09/16/2010
Could be worse, could be a Belgium accent, or a Swiss one....
Oh yes, you guessed it, I'm French ,))))))))))
Still, this lady is suffering a great deal, sending healing vibes her way
05:49 PM on 09/17/2010
Agreed, getting a Belgian accent would really suck!
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syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
04:44 AM on 09/20/2010
Flemish or Belgian French?