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Mini-Stroke Can Harm the Brain Even if Symptoms Quickly Disappear

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Mini-Stroke Can Harm the Brain Even if Symptoms Quickly Disappear

The symptoms of a transient ischemic attack (TIA), often called a mini-stroke, usually go away within minutes, but the event could cause the same long-term decline in memory and cognitive function as a full-blown stroke, a new study has found.

“This suggests that in people who have a TIA — which is generally thought to not cause any lasting damage in the brain — cognitive decline clearly occurs at the same rate as in a person who has had a stroke, which causes damage clearly identified on imaging,” says Cheryl Bushnell, MD, a professor of neurology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Dr. Bushnell, who is also a neurologist at Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, wasn’t involved in the study.

Mini-Stroke Causes a Temporary Lack of Blood Flow to the Brain

A transient ischemic attack is considered a “temporary” stroke because it means there is a short-lived lack of blood flow to part of the brain. Without blood flow, brain cells can’t function and start to die.

The symptoms of TIA and a stroke are the same, but TIA symptoms usually stop in a matter of minutes. TIA is still a medical emergency that warrants a trip to the ER, especially because it can raise the risk for a full stroke in the near future.

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