Brief episode of neurological dysfunction due to temporary focal cerebral or retinal ischaemia without infarction, e.g. a weak limb, aphasia or loss of vision, usually lasting seconds or minutes with complete recovery; symptoms last less than ~24 hours
Aetiology
Usually the result of microemboli
Clinical presentation
Sudden loss of function, usually lasting for minutes only, with complete recovery and no evidence of infarction on imaging
Amaurosis fugax - sudden transient loss of vision in one eye
A TIA causing an episode of amaurosis fugax is often the first clinical evidence of internal carotid artery stenosis - a warning sign of incipient ICA territory stroke
Investigations
History - diagnosis of TIA is often based solely on its description