Transient ischemic attack: Difference between revisions
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===Overview (summary)=== | ===Overview (summary)=== | ||
A '''Transient Ischemic Attack''' ('''TIA''') is a ''brief'' loss of neurologic function. In a TIA, the affected brain cells were not killed, but only transiently deprived of blood supply and the signs of what seems to be a stroke, (or black-out), pass quickly and ''completely''. A TIA is often a warning sign of an impending stroke, however, and like a true stroke, is a neurologic emergency. None the less, a TIA is ''not'' a true stroke. | A '''Transient Ischemic Attack''' ('''TIA''') is a ''brief'' loss of neurologic function. In a TIA, the affected [[brain]] cells were not killed, but only transiently deprived of blood supply and the signs of what seems to be a [[stroke]], (or black-out), pass quickly and ''completely''. A TIA is often a warning sign of an impending stroke, however, and like a true stroke, is a neurologic emergency. None the less, a TIA is ''not'' a true stroke. | ||
Revision as of 18:43, 8 May 2007
Overview (summary)
A Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) is a brief loss of neurologic function. In a TIA, the affected brain cells were not killed, but only transiently deprived of blood supply and the signs of what seems to be a stroke, (or black-out), pass quickly and completely. A TIA is often a warning sign of an impending stroke, however, and like a true stroke, is a neurologic emergency. None the less, a TIA is not a true stroke.