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Transient global amnesia



Transient global amnesia
Classification & external resources
ICD-10 G45.4
ICD-9 437.7
DiseasesDB 13251
eMedicine neuro/380 
MeSH D020236

Transient global amnesia (TGA), is an anxiety-producing temporary loss of short-term memory. Typically, patients will not be able to remember events for the past few hours, and not be able to retain new information for more than a few minutes. Patients will suffer the effects of TGA for up to 24 hours, after which symptoms resolve. Worldwide, its incidence is approximately 2.9–10/100 000 cases per year. [1]

Contents

Differential diagnosis

TGA is differentiated from stroke by the lack of tingling, peripheral limb involvement, speech impairment or ability to walk. It is differentiated from subarachnoid hemorrhage from the lack of headache. [2]

Presentation

TGA does produce an inability to assimilate certain, generally current or recent, details while social skills and memories of distant past events or trivia is maintained.

The requirements for TGA include: [3]

-The attack was witnessed and reported as being a definite loss of recent memory (anterograde amnesia).

-There was an absence of clouding of consciousness.

-There were no focal neurological signs or deficits during or after the attack.

-There were no features of epilepsy, and the patient did not have any recent head injury or active epilepsy

-The attack resolved within 24 hours

Causes

The underlying cause of TGA is unclear. One current hypothesis is that TGA may be due to venous congestion of the brain [4], leading to ischemia of structures involved with memory, such as the hippocampus.[5] This may be triggered by performing a Valsalva maneuver in the context of various precipitating events such as immersion in cold water, sexual activity, severe emotional stress and vigorous exertion.[6] [7]

Prognosis

The prognosis of TGA is very good. It does not affect mortality and has a small recurrence rate.

"The most important part of management after diagnosis is looking after the psychological needs of the patient and his or her relatives. Seeing a once competent and healthy partner, sibling or parent become incapable of remembering what was said only a minute ago is very distressing, and hence it is often the relatives who will require reassurance." [8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Quinette P, Guillery-Girard B , Dayan J , et al. What does transient global amnesia really mean? Review of the literature and thorough study of 142 cases. Brain 2006;129 (Part 7) :1640–58.
  2. ^ Monzani V, Rovellini A , Schinco G , et al. Transient global amnesia or subarachnoid haemorrhage? Clinical and laboratory findings in a particular type of acute global amnesia. Eur J Emerg Med 2000;7:291–3.
  3. ^ Hodges JR, Warlow CP Syndromes of transient amnesia: towards a classification; a study of 153 cases. Neurosurg Psychiatry 1990;53:834–43
  4. ^ Lewis SL. Aetiology of transient global amnesia. Lancet.1998;352:397-399..
  5. ^ Chung CP, Hsu H , Chao A , et al. Detection of intracranial venous reflux in patients of transient global amnesia. Neurology 2006;66:1873–7.
  6. ^ UCLA Department of Medicine - wfsection-Transient Global Amnesia. Retrieved on 2007-07-25.
  7. ^ Moreno-Lugris XC, Martinez-Alvarez J , Branas F , et al. Transient global amnesia. Case–control study of 24 cases. Rev Neurol 1996;24:554–7.
  8. ^ Magnus Harrison and Mark Williams The diagnosis and management of transient global amnesia in the emergency department Emerg Med J 2007; 24: 444-445. doi:10.1136/emj.2007.046565
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Transient_global_amnesia". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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