Transient Global Amnesia: Comparison
Please note this is a comparison between Version 3 by Conner Chen and Version 2 by Conner Chen.

Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a clinical syndrome characterized by the sudden onset of a temporary memory disorder with profound anterograde amnesia and a variable impairment of the past memory. Usually, the attacks are preceded by a precipitating event, last up to 24 h and are not associated with other neurological deficits. Diagnosis can be challenging because the identification of TGA requires the exclusion of some acute amnestic syndromes that occur in emergency situations and share structural or functional alterations of memory circuits. 

  • transient global amnesia
  • amnesia
  • hippocampus

1. Introduction

Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a clinical syndrome characterized by the sudden onset of profound anterograde amnesia and a less prominent retrograde memory impairment, lasting up to 24 h and not otherwise associated with other neurological deficits [1,2,3,4][1][2][3][4]. Headache, dizziness, and nausea are the most common accompanying complaints [4]. Even if the symptoms of TGA are quite characteristic, the differential diagnosis includes some acute amnestic syndromes, transient and totally reversible, that occur in emergency situations and share structural or functional alteration of memory circuits [5].
In recent years, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have proven useful in confirming the diagnosis by identifying diffusion-weighted (DWI) lesions in the CA1 field of the hippocampal cornu ammonis [6]. However, the level of detection of the hippocampal DWI lesions in patients with TGA is highly time-dependent, so the maximum diagnostic yield of DWI lesions occurs 24 to 96 h after the onset of symptoms [7,8,9][7][8][9].
The annual incidence of TGA is on average at 3.4–10.4/100,000 and increases to 23.5/100,000 in subjects over 50 years of age [1,3,4,10,11][1][3][4][10][11]. The age at onset ranges from 61 to 67.3 years and the gender distribution is estimated at 50.7% females and 49.3% males [12,13,14,15,16][12][13][14][15][16].

2. TGA Roadmap

Addressing a patient with a suspected TGA requires a precise and detailed roadmap by the neurologist, keeping in mind the diagnostic criteria, the differential diagnosis, the mandatory and optional investigations, and the timing of each of these issues. The main steps of this proposed roadmap are summarized in Figure 1 and detailed in the following paragraphs.
Figure 1. TGA roadmap.

2.1. Risk Profile

Over the years, epidemiological studies have shown the association of TGA with some risk factors.
  • Sexual intercourse;
  • Valsalva-associated maneuvers;
  • Unspecified
  • [
  • 6
  • ,
  • 7,10,12,20,26,27,28][6][7
  • Migraine history. In 2014 a large nationwide, population-based cohort study, enrolling 158.301 migraine patients and 158.301 healthy controls (HC), demonstrated that migraines are associated with an increased risk of TGA (incidence rate ratio =2.48, p = 0.002), particularly in female patients aged 40–60 years [17]. Noteworthy, in the same study, the subjects with a history of migraines had a significantly younger age of TGA onset (56.6 years) compared to the control group (61.4 years), suggesting that migraines could lead to an earlier age of disease onset [17]. In a recent analysis of the data obtained from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which represents 20% of the US community hospitals for the years 1999–2008, patients with a diagnosis of migraines had 5.98 times greater odds of having TGA compared with patients without migraines [18]. In a more recent systematic review and meta-analysis, it was confirmed that there is a higher relative risk (RR) of TGA for migraine vs. non-migraine individuals [RR = 2.48, 95% confidence-interval (95% CI) = (1.32, 4.87)] [19].
  • Psychiatric comorbidity. Epidemiological studies suggest that some personality traits might be relevant to the etiology of the disease
Information about precipitating events and the beginning of the attack should be available from a capable observer who witnessed the onset (Table 1).
Table 1. Diagnostic criteria for transient global amnesia (data from Hodges JR and Warlow CP 1990) [1,2][1][2].
Documented TGA attacks are preceded in 50–90% of cases by precipitating events that may be divided into the following classes:
  • Emotional stress, (i.e., triggered by medical procedures, interpersonal conflict, birth/death announcement, and difficult/exhausting workday);
  • Physical effort, (i.e., gardening, housework, and sawing wood);
  • Acute pain;
  • Water contact/temperature change, (i.e., hot bath/shower and cold swim);
32].
  • Reduction of executive function
Executive functions refer to cognitive processes that control and coordinate both cognition and behavior. A meta-analysis of 152 effect sizes from 25 studies showed a “large” reduction in the executive function of TGA patients in relation to comparison subjects [48].

2.4.2. Preserved Cognitive Functions in TGA

  • Short-term memory
(I.e., reproduction of information without a delay or after a short delay during which the information can actively be tested).
  • Semantic memory
(I.e., general and acontextual knowledge about the world).
  • Implicit and procedural memory
(I.e., nondeclarative memory contents such as skills and motor abilities) [32,46][32][46]. Since the lack of additional neurological symptoms is mandatory for the diagnosis of TGA (Table 1), a neurological examination should be performed during the attack and not after to be sure that other neurological symptoms and signs do not accompany amnesia.

2.5. Diagnostic Criteria

The clinical diagnosis of TGA is confirmed by applying the criteria provided by Hodges and Warlow [2] (Table 1). Although these criteria still remain valid in clinical practice, some additions are necessary. The possibility of associated retrograde amnesia is not included in the criteria, but it is well recognized that patients with TGA can have some degree of retrograde amnesia during the episode [3,49][3][49]. As mentioned earlier, several studies show the involvement of other cognitive functions, such as executive functions or visuo-perceptual abilities [3,44][3][44]. Furthermore, the criteria currently adopted do not allow people to exclude some acute amnestic syndromes that occur in emergency situations, such as ischemic or hypoxic events, migraines, toxic amnesia, etc.

2.6. Laboratory Tests and Instrumental Evaluation

No laboratory investigations can actually confirm the diagnosis of TGA. However, a laboratory diagnostic workup should include at least glucose and electrolyte dosage. Hypoglycemia can result in an amnestic deficit and might be considered a differential diagnosis if the patient is diabetic. Alcohol level and a toxicology screen should also be reviewed (see Section 2.8).

2.6.1. Electroencephalography (EEG)

During and after typical TGA episodes, EEG findings have been reported to be normal [11,50,51][11][50][51]. EEG should be considered if there are features suggestive of repetitive or seizure-like etiology. Temporal lobe or complex partial seizures might present in fact as transient epileptic amnesia (TEA), particularly when repetitive episodes of transient amnesia occur [52] (see Section 2.8)[52].

2.6.2. Transthoracic Echocardiography

Echocardiography may be indicated to evaluate left ventricular ejection fraction and septal hypertrophy in TGA patients with elevated blood pressure on admission. In fact, septal hypertrophy, defined as the presence of an increase in the thickness of the septum (women >9 mm, men >10 mm), is considered a possible indicator of chronic hypertension [25]. Therefore, transthoracic echocardiography can help differentiate chronic hypertension from acute hypertension and support the indication of antihypertensive drugs in patients with previously unknown hypertension.

2.7. Neuroimaging

Although the diagnosis of TGA is largely clinical and of exclusion, neuroimaging can provide an important diagnostic contribution.

2.7.1. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

In 1998, Strupp et al. first described high-signal hippocampal lesions using DWI MRI [53]. Since then, the role of MRI in the diagnosis of TGA has been largely confirmed and clarified [6,8,54,55,56,57][6][8][54][55][56][57]. It has been demonstrated, in fact, that the detection rate of hippocampal lesions in TGA can be improved by up to 85% with optimized MRI parameters and by acknowledging the time course of the lesion [7]. The following are the main MRI findings in patients with TGA (Table 2):
Table 2.
 MRI findings and parameters in TGA.
  • Almost all lesions can be selectively found in the area corresponding to the CA1 sector (Sommer sector) of the hippocampal cornu ammonis [6,7,8][6][7][8] (Figure 2).
  • Lesions can be single or multiple and vary in size from 1 to 5 mm
  • [7]

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