High prevalence of executive dysfunction
in patients following TIA or minor ischemic stroke
Nearly four in 10 TIA and minor stroke patients may experience
cognitive problems, according to researchers evaluating 140 consecutive patients
(average age 67) admitted to the Urgent TIA Clinic at the London Health Sciences
Centre in London, Ontario, according to a study presented at the American Stroke
Association's International Stroke Conference 2010
Researchers evaluated 140 patients (average age 67) admitted
to the Urgent TIA Clinic at the London Health Sciences Centre in London, Ontario.
Within a week of symptom onset, the researchers used a short, easily administered
battery of tests that can detect deficits in so-called "executive functions,"
including speed of mental processing, abstraction and reasoning ability. They
found that these functions - higher-level cognitive skills that control and coordinate
other mental abilities and behaviors - were impaired in almost 40 percent of the
TIA and minor stroke patients.
Researchers have known that TIAs and minor strokes can
subtly change mental abilities, a condition known as vascular cognitive impairment.
But little has been known about how common impairment was in these patients.
"Transient ischemic attacks and minor strokes are not
just a warning of future stroke. They are an indication that the process of brain
injury may have begun," said Michael Harnadek, Ph.D., the study's lead author
and a neuropsychologist with the London Health Sciences Centre.
Researchers also administered the most commonly used
test for mental functioning, the Mini Mental Status Exam, which is designed to
identify patients with Alzheimer's dementia. They found that test couldn't detect
the cognitive problems in minor stroke and TIA patients. Harnadek said this indicates
while cognitive impairment is common in patients who have experienced TIAs and
minor strokes, it can be missed if doctors rely only on measures designed to test
for Alzheimer's dementia.
"Using measures that specifically test executive functioning,
screening for cognitive impairment can be done quickly and easily," he said.
Ischemic events - caused by a blockage in a blood vessel
in or leading to the brain - account for about 85 percent of all strokes. About
one-third of people who have a TIA, also known as a "warning stroke," have a stroke
within a year, according to the American Stroke Association.
Among the patients in the study who experienced a TIA,
symptoms went away within 24 hours, while for the minor stroke patients, physical
or sensory symptoms persisted but didn't cause serious disability.
Sixty-one percent of the study subjects were women, but
the researchers haven't yet determined whether rates of impairment varied between
males and females. The study also didn't include enough patients to discern differences
among racial or ethnic groups, Harnadek said.
The study should be replicated elsewhere to see whether
rates of impairment are similar for the same type of patients, he said. Researchers
should also try to learn whether patients' impairment interferes with their ability
to understand and follow the treatment guidance their physician provides.
"Our research, and similar studies, underscores the need
for the prevention of cerebrovascular disease, as well as early detection and
treatment in those affected, to preserve cognitive health," Harnadek said.
Co-authors are: Richard Chan, M.D.; Cheryl Mayer, R.N.,
M.Sc.N.; and Vladimir Hachinski, M.D., D.Sc. Author disclosures are on the abstract.
Funding for the study was provided through the Canadian
Stroke Network.
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