Results 151 to 160 of about 116,714 (195)
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Transient Ischemic Attacks

Neurology, 1983
Patients with transient cerebral ischemic attacks (TIAs) are generally felt to be at increased risk for stroke. A comprehensive clinical evaluation consisting of a thorough history and physical examination, as well as adjunctive laboratory and radiologic studies, is required to substantiate the diagnosis and to identify the underlying etiology.
M, Quan, J C, Puffer, R A, Johnson
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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 ...
W T, Cornblath, J D, Trobe
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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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Vertebrobasilar Transient Ischemic Attacks

Archives of Neurology, 1985
To the Editor. —Bogousslavsky and Regli1noted that 12 patients with severe, bilateral, occlusive disease of the internal carotid artery often had, in addition to attacks of unilateral hemispheral ischemia, the following symptoms: (1) bilateral motor, sensory, or visual dysfunction; (2) dizziness or vertigo; (3) ataxia; (4) diplopia; (5) dysarthria or ...
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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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Transient ischemic attacks

Postgraduate Medicine, 1981
Several options exist for treating transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), although none can eliminate the risk of cerebral infarction. For carotid TIA, carotid endarterectomy is the preferred therapy in patients with an angiographically demonstrated sclerotic lesion, whereas extracranial-intracranial bypass may be beneficial in patients with carotid artery
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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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Transient Ischemic Attack

2022
The transient ischemic attack is a neurological emergency which is a clinical view of focal cerebral, retinal, or spinal dysfunction that lasts less than an hour, without any detectable acute infarction in neurological imaging methods. TIA is a serious warning for ischemic stroke, and this risk is particularly high in the first 48 hours. Following TIAs,
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Transient Ischemic Attack

New England Journal of Medicine, 2003
Micah J, Eimer, Nalini M, Rajamannan
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Transient Ischemic Attacks

The American Journal of Nursing, 1973
M R, Keller, B L, Truscott
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