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Transient Ischemic Attack

New England Journal of Medicine, 2020
Key Clinical Points Transient Ischemic Attack Cerebral or retinal symptoms consistent with transient ischemic attack (TIA) usually last for seconds or minutes and typically last less than 1 hour.
Michael Moussouttas   +1 more
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Transient ischemic attacks

Postgraduate Medicine, 1994
Preview All transient ischemic attacks are not created equal. However, they are a medical emergency, and all patients should be hospitalized for urgent evaluation of their risk for stroke or myocardial infarction. For optimal management, it must be determined whether an ischemic attack affects the anterior or posterior circulation. In this article, the
Seemant Chaturvedi, Vladimir Hachinski
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Transient Ischemic Attacks

New England Journal of Medicine, 2002
The occurrence of fleeting episodes of numbness or paralysis was known to early physicians. One referred to them as “straws which show how the intracranial wind is blowing.” In 1950, a patient with...
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Transient Ischemic Attacks in a Community

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1969
Sixty cases of transient cerebral ischemic attack (TIA) were noted during five years of observation of a large retirement community. The incidence of new cases was 1.1/1,000/yr and was 1.8 times greater in men than in women. Electrocardiographic abnormalities were associated with increased risk of TIA development; hypertension and cardiomegaly on chest
W. Stanley Wilson   +4 more
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Retinal Transient Ischemic Attack

Archives of Neurology, 1996
In a recent article Streifler et al 1 reported the results from the North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET); they conclude that "the better prognosis of retinal transient ischemic attack [RTIA] in comparison with that of hemispheric transient ischemic attack [HTIA] observed in our study does not preclude the benefit of carotid ...
Wayne T. Cornblath, Jonathan D. Trobe
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Transient Ischemic Attack, Protracted Transient Ischemic Attack, and Completed Stroke

European Neurology, 1983
The natural history and follow-up (5-7 years) of 76 patients with transient ischemic attacks (TIA), 45 patients with protracted transient ischemic attacks (PTIA), 85 patients with minor strokes (labelled as partial nonprogressing stroke; PNS) has been studied with the purpose of a comparative evaluation, since TIA, PTIA and PNS are often grouped ...
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The course of transient ischemic attacks

Neurology, 1988
Seventy-eight patients admitted with their first cerebrovascular episode of presumed ischemic origin were evaluated during the first 24 hours to decide whether the differential diagnosis of stroke versus transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) could be made earlier than after 24 hours, if the initial degree of neurologic deficit and the persistence of ...
Marianne Juhler, Lene Werdelin
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Transient Ischemic Attack

New England Journal of Medicine, 2002
A 72-year-old woman telephones her physician immediately after recovering from a 30-minute episode of difficulty speaking and weakness of the right side of the face and right arm. Her medical history is unremarkable. How should she be treated?
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