1. Long-Term Risk of Stroke after Transient Global Amnesia in Two Prospective Cohorts
- Author
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Romoli, M., Tuna, M. A., Mcgurgan, I., Li, L., Giannandrea, D., Eusebi, P., Caprioli, F. T., Lotti, A., Salvadori, N., Sarchielli, P., Gili, A., Mosconi, M. G., Venti, M. P., Stracci, F., Ricci, S., Paciaroni, M., Parnetti, L., Calabresi, Paolo, Rothwell, P. M., Calabresi P. (ORCID:0000-0003-0326-5509), Romoli, M., Tuna, M. A., Mcgurgan, I., Li, L., Giannandrea, D., Eusebi, P., Caprioli, F. T., Lotti, A., Salvadori, N., Sarchielli, P., Gili, A., Mosconi, M. G., Venti, M. P., Stracci, F., Ricci, S., Paciaroni, M., Parnetti, L., Calabresi, Paolo, Rothwell, P. M., and Calabresi P. (ORCID:0000-0003-0326-5509)
- Abstract
Background and Purpose - Transient global amnesia (TGA) is known as a benign syndrome, but recent data from neuroradiological studies support an ischemic cause in some cases, which might suggest an increased susceptibility to cerebrovascular events. We determined the long-term risk of stroke after a first TGA in 2 independent prospective cohorts. Methods - In 2 independent prospective cohorts of patients with TGA (OXVASC [Oxford Vascular Study], population-based; NU (Northern Umbria) cohort, TGA registry), cardiovascular risk factors and long-term outcomes, including stroke and major cardiovascular events, were identified on follow-up. Cardiovascular risk factors were treated according to primary prevention guidelines. In OXVASC, the age-/sex-adjusted risk of stroke during follow-up was compared with that expected from the rate in the underlying study population. Results - Among 525 patients with TGA (425 NU and 100 OXVASC), mean (SD) age was 65.1 (9.5) years and 42.5% male. Hypertension (58.1%), dyslipidemia (40.4%), and smoking (36.4%) were the most frequent cardiovascular risk factors. The risk of stroke was similar in the 2 cohorts, with a pooled annual risk of 0.6% (95% CI, 0.4-0.9) and a 5-year cumulative risk of 2.7% (1.1-4.3). Moreover, the stroke risk in OXVASC cases was no greater than that expected in the underlying study population (adjusted relative risk=0.73; 0.12-4.54; P=0.74). Conclusions - TGA does not carry an increased risk of stroke, at least when cardiovascular risk factors are treated according to primary prevention guidelines.
- Published
- 2019