THE AETIOLOGY OF TRANSIENT GLOBAL AMNESIA
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Brain
- Vol. 113 (3) , 639-657
- https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/113.3.639
Abstract
A case-control comparison of 114 transient global amnesia (TGA) patients using both normal community-based controls (n = 109) and transient ischaemic attack (TIA) controls (n = 212) showed no evidence of an increased risk of TGA associated with any of the conventional risk factors for cerebrovascular disease. However, migraine was significantly more common in the TGA patients than in either control group. A prospective longitudinal study using actuarial (life table) analysis confirmed that the prognosis of the TGA patients was strikingly better than that of the TIA controls. An important minority (7%) of TGA cases developed epilepsy, usually within one year of presentation. On the basis of this evidence, a thromboembolic aetiology for TGA can be confidently rejected, at least for the vast majority of cases. There are good theoretical reasons to link migraine and TGA causally, and occasionally epilepsy may masquerade as TGA. In the remaining cases the cause remains unknown.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Long-term prognosis after transient ischemic attacksActa Neurologica Scandinavica, 2009
- Transient global amnesia - its clinical and pathophysiological basis and prognosisActa Neurologica Scandinavica, 2009
- Outcome of 314 patients with transient ischemic attacks.Stroke, 1982
- Transient global amnesia and migraineNeurology, 1981
- Transient global amnesiaNeurology, 1979
- Long-term prognosis in transient global amnesiaJAMA, 1979
- Transient Global Amnesia Due to a Dominant Hemisphere TumorArchives of Neurology, 1977
- Characteristics of life headache histories in a nonclinic populationNeurology, 1977
- Design and analysis of randomized clinical trials requiring prolonged observation of each patient. II. Analysis and examplesBritish Journal of Cancer, 1977
- EXPERIENCE FROM A MULTICENTER STROKE REGISTER - PRELIMINARY-REPORT1976