'Footprints' of transient ischemic attacks: A diffusion-weighted MRI study

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Abstract

Objective: Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) conveys temporal as well as anatomic information about brain infarction, and is therefore well suited to identify ischemic injury that has occurred simultaneously, or closely linked in time, with a transient ischemic attack (TIA). We aimed to determine the proportion and clinical characteristics of patients with TIA who harbor infarction(s) on DWI. Methods: Using T2-weighted imaging (T2-WI), fast fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR), and DWI, we studied 57 consecutive patients presenting with acute focal neurologic symptoms lasting less than 24 h. Results: A hyperintense DWI lesion was identified in a vascular territory appropriate to the symptoms in 27 patients (47%). Lesions judged to be clinically appropriate on T2-WI and FLAIR overlapped with a DWI lesion in 41 and 48% of patients, respectively. Independent predictors of infarction on DWI were previous nonstereotypic TIAs, presentation with motor symptoms, and identified stroke mechanism. Conclusion: DWI establishes that recent infarction occurs in almost half of patients with the clinical syndrome of TIA and this subgroup is more likely to harbor an underlying cardiac or cerebrovascular abnormality. © 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Ay, H., Oliveira-Filho, J., Buonanno, F. S., Schaefer, P. W., Furie, K. L., Chang, Y., … Koroshetz, W. J. (2002). “Footprints” of transient ischemic attacks: A diffusion-weighted MRI study. Cerebrovascular Diseases, 14(3–4), 177–186. https://doi.org/10.1159/000065682

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