I'm sorry that I've been away from this forum for a few days and didn't see your post until now.
I have a St. Jude valve in my chest. I had a TIA three years ago and, suspecting that it may have been a stroke, I immediately took 2 mg of aspirin and took my INR -- the meter said 2.6. Symptomatically, my left leg felt kind of heavy, and it felt a bit odd when I walked.
I had no medical insurance, and trusted my meter, and dragged this leg around for two days before finally going to the hospital to check out this persistent weakness.
I didn't say the 'magic words' (stroke, heart attack) to get their immediate attention, so I waited in E.R. before they finally decided to dig further into it. An MRI, eventually, showed that I had, indeed had a TIA. The doctors insisted in calling it a STROKE. They put me on a 'stroke protocol.' This 'protocol' included Lipitor (a statin drug used to lower a person's cholesterol). Of course, the study that they used to create this protocol didn't include those like me who took coumadin/warfarin and whose stroke was not caused by cholesterol.
My motor functions seem to have all resolved. I have what may be considered a slight change in my brain -- when I hear words, I often convert them into written text, and process them more strictly than most people would process the free form speech that we all use. As an editor, this may be something of an advantage.
As others have noted, the physical defects often resolve. In my case, I'm assuming that the motor circuits rewired so that the deficits were overcome.
I'm glad to hear that your motor deficits are also improving - in a month or less you may not even know they were there.
I've been taking coumadin for decades. I monitored my dosage and INR since 2009. I trusted my meter - and it let me down. My meter said 2.6 - the hospital said 1.7.
If they put you on coumadin be sure that your INR is tested weekly. If it looks like you'll be on it for a long time, I strongly suggest that you get a Coag-Sense or CoaguChek XS meter, self-test weekly, and check the results against a blood draw every month or so.
I wish you a complete recovery and a competent medical team