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TIA: It's an Emergency
1 in20 TIA suffer stroke within 1 week
By Daniel J. DeNoon WebMD Medical News
One in 20 people who suffers a transient
ischemic attack -- TIA -- has a stroke within
seven days, a new study confirms.
TIAs are like strokes except for one thing --
people fully recover from TIAs and there is
no permanent brain damage. How dangerous are
TIAs? Different studies have come up with
different answers.
Now Matthew Giles, DPhil, and Peter M. Rothwell,
FRCP, of the stroke prevention research unit at
the University of Oxford, England, have put all
the numbers together. It turns out that
different studies have looked at different
populations treated in different places in
different ways.
But when they lumped all major studies together,
Giles and Rothwell find that a person who
suffers a TIA has more than a one in 20 risk of
having a stroke within one week. That drops to
about a one in 100 risk if a person gets
emergency care immediately after a TIA.
"The risk is considerable. A TIA is a medical
emergency," Giles tells WebMD. "People are not
very good at recognizing that what they had is a
TIA or minor stroke. And even if they do
recognize it correctly, they don't always seek
care right away."
Getting immediate care is essential, says Ralph
L. Sacco, MD, professor and chairman of
neurology at the University of Miami.
"This study and others are telling us that if
TIAs are diagnosed and treated quickly, we can
make really big differences in outcome," Sacco
tells WebMD. "A TIA is to stroke what unstable
angina is to heart disease. We need to figure
out right away what is wrong and get people on
the proper treatment to reduce that risk of
stroke -- which is highest in the early days
after a TIA."
Rapid medical care after a TIA can reduce the
risk of stroke by 80%, says Larry Goldstein, MD,
director of the stroke center at Duke
University.
"The message we have been putting out is that a
TIA is a medical emergency. There is a high risk
for going on to a stroke," Goldstein tells
WebMD. "At least a third of the time, it turns
out that a TIA is a minor stroke with complete
resolution of symptoms. We should approach TIA
the same way as stroke. So we try to treat them
both the same."
The symptoms of a TIA are the same as the
symptoms of a stroke. They include:
-
Sudden weakness on one side
of the body
-
Inability to move part or all
of one side of the body
-
Numbness or tingling on one
side of the body
-
Trouble speaking or
understanding what others say
-
Dizziness, staggering, or
fainting
-
Sudden loss of strength in
the legs
Any one of these symptoms may signal a TIA.
The Giles and Rothwell study appears in the
early online issue of The Lancet Neurology.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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"People are not very good at recognizing that what
they had is a TIA or minor stroke. And even if they
do recognize it correctly, they don't always seek
care right away." |
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