Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA)

1️⃣ Definition 

A Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) is:

A transient episode of focal neurological dysfunction caused by focal brain, spinal cord, or retinal ischemia, without acute infarction on imaging.

This is the tissue-based definition (AHA/ASA), which has replaced the old “<24 hours” time-based definition.

  • Earlier definition: Symptoms resolving within 24 hours
  • Current definition: No infarction on DWI MRI, regardless of duration

Even 5–10 minutes of deficit can represent completed infarction, so imaging is crucial.


2️⃣ Why TIA is a Critical Care Emergency

TIA is not “minor stroke.” It is:

  • A warning stroke
  • A medical emergency
  • A marker of unstable vascular disease

TIA

Minor Stroke

No infarct on MRI

Infarct present

Fully reversible

May have mild deficit

Risk of Stroke After TIA

Time After TIA

Stroke Risk

48 hours

5–10%

7 days

8–12%

90 days

10–20%

3️⃣ Pathophysiology

TIA results from temporary cerebral hypoperfusion due to:

A. Embolic Causes

  • Cardioembolism (AF most common)
  • Carotid plaque emboli
  • Aortic arch atheroma

B. Large Artery Atherosclerosis

  • Internal carotid stenosis
  • Vertebrobasilar disease

C. Small Vessel Disease

  • Lacunar TIAs

D. Hemodynamic Causes

  • Severe carotid stenosis + hypotension


4️⃣ Clinical Presentation

Symptoms are focal, sudden, and maximal at onset.

🔹 Anterior Circulation TIA

Features:

  • Unilateral weakness
  • Hemisensory loss
  • Aphasia (dominant hemisphere)
  • Monocular vision loss (amaurosis fugax)


🔹 Posterior Circulation TIA

Features:

  • Diplopia
  • Dysarthria
  • Ataxia
  • Vertigo (with focal signs)
  • Bilateral weakness
  • Drop attacks

 Isolated vertigo without focal deficit is rarely TIA.


5️⃣ TIA Mimics 

Mimic

Clue

Seizure with Todd’s paralysis

Post-ictal confusion

Migraine aura

Gradual spread, positive symptoms

Hypoglycemia

Altered sensorium

Functional disorder

Inconsistent signs

Peripheral vertigo

No focal neuro deficit


6️⃣ Risk Stratification – ABCD² Score

Parameter

Points

Age ≥ 60

1

BP ≥ 140/90

1

Clinical: weakness

2

Clinical: speech only

1

Duration ≥ 60 min

2

Duration 10–59 min

1

Diabetes

1

Max = 7

Interpretation

  • 0–3 Low risk
  • 4–5 Moderate
  • 6–7 High risk
    Modern guidelines do NOT rely solely on ABCD² for admission decisions.
    Imaging and vascular evaluation are mandatory.


7️⃣ Emergency Evaluation (Within 24 Hours)

1. Brain Imaging

Preferred: MRI with DWI

  • Detects silent infarction
  • Up to 30–50% “TIA” have infarct on MRI

If unavailable Non-contrast CT (rule out hemorrhage)


2. Vascular Imaging

  • Carotid Doppler
  • CT angiography
  • MR angiography

Goal: Detect ≥50% carotid stenosis


3. Cardiac Evaluation

  • ECG
  • Continuous telemetry
  • Echocardiography
  • Holter (if cryptogenic)

Look for:

  • Atrial fibrillation
  • LV thrombus
  • PFO
  • Valvular disease


4. Laboratory Work

  • CBC
  • Glucose
  • Lipid profile
  • Renal function
  • Coagulation profile


8️⃣ Acute Management in ICU / Stroke Unit

A. Antiplatelet Therapy (Non-cardioembolic TIA)

If minor stroke or high-risk TIA (ABCD² ≥4):

Dual Antiplatelet Therapy (DAPT)

  • Aspirin + Clopidogrel
  • Duration: 21 days (max 90 days in selected)

Evidence: CHANCE & POINT trials

Then Single antiplatelet lifelong


B. If Cardioembolic (AF Present)

Start anticoagulation:

  • DOAC preferred
  • Timing:
    • TIA Start within 1–3 days
    • Small infarct 3–5 days

No need for heparin bridging in most cases.


C. Blood Pressure Management

  • Do NOT aggressively reduce BP
  • Treat only if >220/120 mmHg
  • Gradual control over days


D. Statins

High-intensity statin for all atherosclerotic TIA

  • LDL target <70 mg/dL (very high risk)


9️⃣ Carotid Revascularization

Indications

Symptomatic carotid stenosis:

Stenosis

Recommendation

≥70%

Carotid endarterectomy within 2 weeks

50–69%

Consider (selected cases)

<50%

Medical therapy

Options

  • Carotid endarterectomy
  • Carotid artery stenting

Endarterectomy preferred in low surgical risk patients.


🔟 Special Situations in CCM

1️⃣ Crescendo TIAs

Multiple TIAs within 24–48h
ICU admission
Urgent vascular imaging
Consider early revascularization


2️⃣ TIA with AF and Hemodynamic Instability

  • Control rate
  • Evaluate LV function
  • Early anticoagulation


3️⃣ Cryptogenic TIA

  • Prolonged rhythm monitoring
  • PFO evaluation
  • Hypercoagulable workup (young patients)


1️⃣1️⃣ Secondary Prevention – Long-Term Strategy

A. Antiplatelet / Anticoagulation

Based on mechanism

B. BP Target

<130/80 mmHg

C. Lipid Target

LDL <70 mg/dL

D. Diabetes Control

HbA1c <7%

E. Lifestyle

  • Smoking cessation
  • Mediterranean diet
  • Exercise 150 min/week


1️⃣2️⃣ Prognosis

TIA is:

  • A marker of unstable plaque
  • A predictor of future stroke
  • A systemic vascular disease indicator

Long-term:

  • risk MI
  • risk vascular death