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Basics

James M. Gebel Jr., MD, MS, FAHA

Gabor Toth, MD


BASICS

DESCRIPTION navigator

Transient ischemic attack (TIA) is a transient episode of 10 minutes or less of clinical symptoms indicating neurological dysfunction caused by focal brain, spinal cord, or retinal ischemia, without acute infarction. Recent TIA is considered a neurological emergency.

EPIDEMIOLOGY navigator

The annual incidence of TIA in the US is estimated to vary from 1 in 200,000 to 1 in 500,000. However, the actual incidence may be higher because many of these attacks are not reported by the patients since their symptoms by definition resolve.

RISK FACTORS navigator

Risk factors include age, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, elevated C-reactive protein, hyperlipidemia, tobacco, sedentary life, obesity, family history of stroke, and prior history of stroke or TIA, and known coronary artery or peripheral vascular disease.

Pregnancy Considerations navigator

There is an increased incidence of TIA and stroke in pregnancy.

Genetics navigator

Mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes, cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy, prothrombin variant, and Leiden factor V mutations are all genetic conditions that can present with TIA.

ETIOLOGY navigator

COMMONLY ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS navigator

Stroke, coronary artery disease, and peripheral arterial disease.


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Diagnosis

DIAGNOSIS

By the new definition, a TIA should resolve within 10 minutes; otherwise it is more likely to be a radiological stroke (cerebral infarct) than a TIA. As in ischemic stroke, the symptoms are typically sudden and abrupt. The clinical features depend on the brain area affected. Common symptoms include:

DIAGNOSTIC TESTS AND INTERPRETATION

Lab navigator

Imaging navigator

Diagnostic Procedures/Other navigator

ECG and cardiac monitoring, either inpatient telemetry or extended (48 hours to 3 weeks) Holter monitoring in select patients to evaluate for arrhythmias.

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS navigator


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Treatment

TREATMENT

MEDICATION navigator

ADDITIONAL TREATMENT

General Measures navigator

Management of coexisting medical illnesses and secondary stroke prevention.

COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES navigator

SURGERY/OTHER PROCEDURES navigator

IN-PATIENT CONSIDERATIONS

Admission Criteria navigator

In general any patient presenting with TIA, within 1 week from the onset of symptoms should be admitted to the hospital for the evaluation of etiology, frequent neurological check monitoring to promptly identify and treat stroke, and for appropriate empiric and then secondary stroke prevention measures. There is an approximately 5.1% risk of full blown stroke within 48 hours of TIA in patients presenting to the emergency room with a diagnosis of TIA. The ABCD2 TIA score and its recent modified renditions can help identify high risk (for stroke and other vascular events) TIA patients, but is not widely used in clinical practice at present time. Recent TIA should be considered a medical emergency like acute stroke. Specialized TIA observation units where a rapid initial workup for stroke mechanism is completed represent an innovative and growing care option which combines efficiency and quality care and can be categorized as observation stays rather than full-blown admissions if the work-up is completed and appropriate definitive secondary prevention treatment are initiated prior to discharge.


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Ongoing Care

ONGOING-CARE

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Patient Monitoring navigator

PATIENT EDUCATION navigator

PROGNOSIS navigator


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Additional Reading

SEE-ALSO

Codes

CODES

ICD9

435.9 Transcerebral ischemia NOS