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TIA and Stroke mimics -

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TIA and Stroke mimics - 'spells' ... To describe some of the stroke or TIA mimics. To run through focal ... Carpal tunnel syndrome, ulnar neuropathy. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TIA and Stroke mimics -


1
TIA and Stroke mimics - spells
Shelagh Coutts MD, FRCPC Assistant Professor,
Calgary Stroke Program, University of Calgary

2
AIMS
  • To describe some of the stroke or TIA mimics.
  • To run through focal versus non focal symptoms.
  • To give some helpful diagnostic pearls.
  • To review what is a stroke or a TIA.
  • To identify what spells you be worried about.

3
The Definition of Stroke/ TIA
  • A clinical syndrome characterized by the sudden
    onset of a focal neurological deficit presumed to
    be on a vascular basis.


4
What is a TIA and why is it not that simple
  • Diagnosis is made on history
  • Dont take what you are told for granted.
  • numb, dead, heavy, weak all mean different
    things to different people.
  • What else could it be.

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6
Conditions Misdiagnosed as TIA
  • Migraine aura
  • Syncope, postural hypotension
  • Seizure
  • Vertigo
  • Transient Global Amnesia
  • Anxiety/Hyperventilation
  • Confusion
  • Unexplained fall
  • Peripheral nerve palsy

7
The clinical diagnosis can be hard
  • Bush Health Problems? Stroke?
  • Then I got a call this morning from another
    medical producer.  First thing he says is  Bush
    has had a stroke.  And it hit me, that's exactly
    what I saw.  Check Bush's mouth, where the
    spittle was coming out.  It's slightly droopy.
     It's very subtle but it's there.

8
What do non neurologists think are Strokes?
Diagnosis
Seizure/post-ictal 19 Migraine
15 Functional disorder
14 Metabolic disturbance
8 Syncope/pre-syncope 6 Infection
6 Cerebral mass 5 Peripheral vestibular
3 MS related 3 Spinal/PNS
3 Confusion NYD 6 Miscellaneous
12
29 of referrals in the ER seen by stroke team
were felt to be NOT stroke/TIA
Wier NU and Buchan AM. JNNP 2005 76863-865.
9
Is it a vascular event or not?
  • Patient or eye witness account.
  • May need clarification dead, numb, dizzy.
  • When did it happen?
  • What were you doing at the time?

10
What things do you need to know?
  • Sudden vs gradual onset.
  • Modalities involved motor, speech etc.
  • Anatomical area involved
  • What was the patient doing at the time?
  • Accompanying symptoms headache tc.
  • History of seizures, migraines, etc.

11
Focal versus on focal symptoms
  • Localised cerebral ischemia causes focal
    symptoms.
  • Non focal symptoms such as faintness , dizziness
    or generalized weakness are rarely due to focal
    cerebral ischemia.

12
Focal neurological symptoms
  • Motor weakness, clumsiness, ataxia one side
    of body.
  • Speech/language difficulty speaking or
    expressing, slurred speech.
  • Sensory symptoms abnormal feeling.
  • Visual monocular, binocular, diplopia.
  • Vestibular vertigo.
  • in isolation not usually stroke.

13
Non focal Neurological symptoms
  • Generalized weakness and/or sensory disturbance.
  • Light-headedness
  • Faintness
  • Blackouts
  • Incontinence of urine or feces
  • Confusion
  • Tinnitus.

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15
Migraine
  • Migraine with aura positive symptoms of focal
    cerebral dysfunction that develop gradually over
    5-20 minutes.
  • Visual disturbance most common.
  • Paraesthesias, heaviness, may also occur.
  • Marching spread of tingling from hand to arm,
    to face over several minutes.
  • In younger people headache.

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17
Migraine equivalent
  • Aura without the headache.
  • More common with increasing age.
  • May not have history of migraines.
  • Slow onset and spread and intensification of
    symptoms.

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19
Syncope/presyncope
  • Loss of consciousness is almost never TIA or
    stroke.
  • Non focal
  • During event- pale, sweaty
  • The history is key - lightheaded, what were they
    doing? Dimming of vision
  • Precipitants?
  • Exclude cardiac causes.

20
Seizure
  • Partial seizure can mimic of TIA.
  • Positive symptoms e.g. tingling, jerking.
  • Spread over a minute or so.
  • Recurrent, stereotyped episodes.
  • May have amnesia for the event.

21
  • 64 year old woman.
  • 20 attacks of pins and needles in her right arm
    and leg over 6 weeks.
  • Sensation started in foot and over 1 minute
    spread like water running up her leg. Each
    attack was the same.
  • CT head showed glioma in the left parietal lobe.
  • Diagnosis partial sensory seizures.

22
Seizure 2
  • Rarely negative symptoms.
  • Todds paresis.
  • Transient speech arrest. Cessation of speech,
    aimless staring, amnesia for the event.
  • Need to rule out a structural intracranial lesion.

23
Structural intracranial lesions
  • Subdural hematoma Only 50 have a trauma
    history. Can cause transient symptoms.
  • Tumor seizures, intermittent focal neurological
    symptoms.
  • Aneurysm or AVM

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26
Vertigo
  • Labyrinthitis severe acute vertigo. Nausea,
    vomiting, ataxia, nystagmus, severe vertigo.
  • Menieres disease repeated crises of severe
    rotatory vertigo. Can be acute. Tinnitus,
    deafness, pressure in the ear.
  • BPPV vertigo or nystagmus occurring after
    changing head position. Less than 1 minute.
    Dix-Hallpike to diagnose.

27
Transient global amnesia
  • Sudden disorder of memory.
  • Often reported as confusion.
  • Antegrade amnesia.
  • Some degree of retrograde amnesia.
  • Repetitively asks same questions.
  • After attack antegrade memory ok.
  • No increased risk of stroke.

28
Metabolic/toxic disorders
  • Hypoglycemia can cause transient and permanent
    focal symptoms. Usually on hypoglycemic agents.
  • Stereotyped in an individual.
  • Can occurr without the adrenergic symptoms.
  • Much check glucose in any Stroke/TIA patient.

29
Metabolic/toxic disorders
  • Hyperglycemia
  • Hyponatremia altered LOC. Focal symptoms rare.
    Can be confused reduced attention level.
  • Hypercalcemia usually encephalopathy.

30
Wernickes encephalopathy
  • Thiamine deficiency.
  • Diplopia, ataxia, confusion.
  • Mainly seen in alcoholics and malnourished
    elderly.
  • TREATABLE thiamine and glucose.
  • Reduced transketolase activity.

31
Multiple sclerosis
  • Usually straightforward.
  • Younger 3rd or 4th decade versus 7th or 8th
    decade for stroke.
  • Usually subacute onset.
  • Previous episodes
  • Abnormal examination.
  • MRI helpful.

32
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33
Mononeuropathy and radiculopathy
  • Sensory loss in a dermatomal or nerve
    distribution.
  • Cortical sensation intact 2 point
    discrimination, joint position sense.
  • Eg. Carpal tunnel syndrome, ulnar neuropathy.

34
Motor neurone disease
  • Many patients with bulbar ALS are seen in the
    stroke clinic.
  • Subtle dysarthria.
  • Other signs may be absent UMN. LMN in same limb,
    tongue fasciculations.
  • MRI leukoariosis.
  • Need to do an EMG to make the diagnosis.

35
Psychological disorders
  • Cannot be explained by conventional medical
    disease.
  • Hyperventilation bilateral limb and perioral
    sensory symptoms.
  • Conversion disorders inconsistent exam,
    incompatible with normal anatomy,
  • Conversion disorder should not be diagnosed
    without careful thought and assessment of an
    expert.

36
So what is important?
  • Weakness
  • Speech involvement
  • Duration gt 10 minutes
  • Diabetic
  • Hypertension
  • Age

37
Recurrent Focal Neurologic Spell Prognosis
Johnston C et al. Neurology 2004622015-2020.
lt10 min, multiple, sensory

Recurrent Transient Neurologic spells
38
Recurrent Focal Neurologic Spell Prognosis
Johnston C et al. Neurology 2004622015-2020.
lt10 min, multiple, sensory
gt10 min, DM,
motor, speech
Recurrent Transient Neurologic spells
Stroke
39
TIA is not so benign Johnston CS et al. JAMA
2000 284 2901-6
OR CI p value Age gt60 1.8
1.3-4.2 0.005 DM 2.0 1.4-2.9
0.001 gt10 min 2.3 1.3-4.2 0.005 Weakness
1.9 1.4-2.6 0.001 Speech 1.5
1.1-2.1 0.01
40
TIA Prognosis Benign Malignant
  • Timing weeks ago days ago
    hours ago
  • Duration sec few minutes gt10 minutes
  • Frequency multiple one to few
  • Sensory yes with positive sx no
  • Motor no yes
  • Speech no yes
  • Risk factors no Htn, DM,
  • Deficit dynamics Mild at onset Severe at
    onset Major early recovery
  • No rush to see/ discharge to clinic See
    urgently/admit

41
Patient A
  • 78 year old woman. At the theatre. Friends
    brought her up to ER because the think she is
    confused.
  • Makes perfect sense when you talk to her, but
    then she keeps asking why are we here, were we
    not going to the theatre tonight. Says to her
    friend - when did you dye your hair blond.
    Doesnt remember your name, but otherwise has a
    normal neurolgical exam.
  • What would you do?
  • Diagnosis? Transient global amnesia.

42
Patient B.
  • 40 year old woman. Healthy.
  • Complaining of numbness and weakness of her right
    arm.
  • Started in her hand and migrated up to her
    shoulder and face over the course of 2 or 3
    minutes. Arm felt heavy during it. Symptoms
    persisted for 40 minutes.
  • Diagnosis Migraine equivalent.

43
Summary
  • Nature of symptoms focal or non focal.
  • Quality negative or positive.
  • Time course sudden gradual migratory pattern.
  • Associated symptoms headache, Physical signs.
  • Imaging CT or MRI
  • Frequency of attacks frequent or stereotyped not
    usually TIA.

44
Summary
  • TIA is a historical diagnosis so you need to take
    a good history!
  • The history will never be easier than on the
    first time you take it from a patient.
  • Never skip the details.
  • Describe what the patient said. Not what you
    think is happening.

45
Summary
  • The risk of a recurrent stroke is high after TIA
    5-20.
  • Time window for prevention is short.
  • High risk patients need to be seen emergently.
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