Emergency Medicine Cases

Episode 6: Transient Ischemic Attack

Jul 2, 2010
Daniel Selchen, neurologist and TIA researcher, and Walter Himmel, emergency physician and educator, break down how to spot true TIA versus mimics. They cover top risk scores, when to image carotids or heart, acute medication choices, and a practical approach to dizzy patients with red flags for posterior circulation disease.
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INSIGHT

TIA Is A Time-Sensitive Stroke Warning

  • Up to 15% of patients have a stroke within three months after a TIA, with half in the first 48 hours.
  • Identifying and acting on TIAs early can prevent devastating, time-sensitive strokes.
ADVICE

Use ABCD2 To Triage TIA Risk

  • Use the ABCD2 score (age, BP, clinical features, duration, diabetes) to risk-stratify TIA patients quickly.
  • Prioritize patients with age>60, motor weakness or speech deficits, high BP, long duration, or diabetes.
ADVICE

Fast High-Yield Neuro Exam

  • Do a focused neuro exam: check alertness, speech, facial droop, pronator drift, and tandem gait or Romberg.
  • A normal exam with intact pronator drift and gait makes major deficits unlikely at that moment.
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