Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) Workup Algorithm

Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) Workup Algorithm

Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) Workup Algorithm

Note: This document provides a structured summary of the Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) Workup Algorithm for educational and reference purposes. It is not a substitute for certified ACLS training and adherence to the latest guidelines published by the American Heart Association (AHA) or other relevant governing bodies. Always consult the most current official guidelines and local protocols.

1. Suspected TIA Recognition

Patient presents with transient neurological symptoms suggestive of ischemia (resolving within 24 hours, typically much shorter).

2. Rapid Initial Assessment

ABCs, vital signs, focused history (symptom description, onset, duration, resolution), physical exam, neurological exam (NIHSS if symptoms present), blood glucose, ECG.

3. Emergent Imaging (CT/MRI)

Obtain non-contrast head CT promptly to rule out hemorrhage or other mimics. MRI (DWI) is preferred if available and not delayed, as it is more sensitive for acute ischemia.

4. Imaging & Clinical Assessment: TIA vs. Mimic?

Does imaging or clinical presentation strongly suggest a stroke mimic (e.g., seizure, migraine, hypoglycemia) or is it consistent with TIA?

NO (Stroke Mimic)

Manage according to the identified mimic’s specific treatment protocol.

YES (Consistent with TIA) – 5. Risk Stratification (ABCD2 Score)

Calculate the ABCD2 score: Age ($\ge$ 60 = 1 pt), BP ($\ge$ 140/90 = 1 pt), Clinical features (unilateral weakness = 2 pt, speech disturbance w/o weakness = 1 pt), Duration ($\ge$ 60 min = 2 pt, 10-59 min = 1 pt), Diabetes = 1 pt.

6. Management Decision based on Risk & Timing

ABCD2 score and time from symptom onset guide the decision for inpatient vs. urgent outpatient workup.

  • High Risk (ABCD2 $\ge$ 4 or crescendo TIA or known carotid stenosis): Urgent evaluation/admission.
  • Lower Risk (ABCD2 < 4): Urgent outpatient evaluation (within 24-48 hours).
Urgent Evaluation / Inpatient Workup

Admit patient. Rapid workup including carotid imaging (CTA/MRA/Ultrasound), cardiac evaluation (ECG, Echo, Holter), labs (lipids, A1c), and neurology consultation.

Urgent Outpatient Workup

Schedule urgent outpatient appointments for carotid imaging, cardiac evaluation, labs, and neurology follow-up.

8. Implement Secondary Prevention

Antiplatelet therapy (Aspirin, Clopidogrel, or dual therapy depending on cause/risk). Statin therapy. Blood pressure control. Diabetes management. Smoking cessation. Lifestyle modifications. Consider anticoagulation if indicated (e.g., AFib).

9. Long-Term Follow-up

Regular follow-up with primary care and/or neurology to ensure risk factors are controlled and secondary prevention is optimized.

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