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Published Online
on January 10, 2008

Stroke. 2008
Published online before print January 10, 2008, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.107.498303
A more recent version of this article appeared on February 1, 2008
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Submitted on July 4, 2007
Accepted on July 17, 2007

Lack of Evidence for Arterial Ischemia in Transient Global Amnesia

Manuel Toledo MD, PhD*; Francesc Pujadas MD; Elisenda Grivé MD; José Álvarez-Sabin MD, PhD; Manuel Quintana; and Alex Rovira MD

From the Neurology Department (M.T., F.P., J.A.-S., M.Q.), Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Hospital Vall d’Hebron; and the Institut de Diagnostic per la Imatge (E.G., A.R.), RM Unit, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Hospital Vall d’Hebron, Barcelona, Spain.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mtoledo75{at}hotmail.com.

Background and Purpose—Lesions in diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI-L) have been commonly described in transient global amnesia (TGA). We investigated a possible relationship between brain ischemia and TGA.

Methods—Twenty-eight patients underwent transcranial and carotid Doppler ultrasonography (including microembolus detection) and MRI within 24 hours of TGA onset (including DWI, perfusion-weighted imaging and angio-MRI). MRI was repeated at 48 to 96 hours (21 patients) and 30 days (18 patients).

Results—Punctate DWI-L were observed in 16 patients (57%) and were not attributable to perfusion abnormalities, arterial stenoses or underlying cardioembolic disease. MRIs performed between 12 and 72 hours showed the highest frequency of DWI-L (88%; P<0.001). No pathological findings were observed at 30 days.

Conclusions—These results suggest that TGA is not related to cerebral arterial ischemia.


Key words: brain ischemia • neuroimaging and MRI • transient global amnesia • transient ischemic attack