2003 Volume 42 Issue 3 Pages 255-258
Objective The aim of this study was to clarify the characteristics of transient ischemic attack (TIA) patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) compared to those without.
Methods We divided 67 TIA patients with left hemispheric involvement into two groups; patients with AF (AF group) and without AF (Non-AF group) and compared the clinical characteristics between the two groups.
Patients AF group included 12 patients (73.0±9.7 years old) and the Non-AF group 55 patients (64.1±9.8 years old).
Results Clinically, arterial disease was less frequently seen in the AF group than in the Non-AF group (17% vs 53%, p=0.028). No significant differences were observed between the two groups in the duration (<1 hour; AF vs Non AF group: 50% vs 32%) or number of TIAs (more than 1; 17% vs 37%), use of anticoagulation or antiplatelet at time of symptomonset (34% vs 14%), past history of stroke and TIA (58% vs 38%) and ischemic heart diseases (8% vs 13%), and risk factors for atherosclerosis including hypertension (42% vs 71%), diabetes mellitus (17% vs 31%), hyperlipidemia (17% vs 47%), smoking (50% vs 51%) and other emboligenic cardiac diseases except for AF (0% vs 4%). Aphasia was observed more frequently in the AF group than in the Non-AF group (67% vs 20%, p=0.003), whereas, hemiparesis without aphasia was seen less frequently in the AF group than in the Non-AF group (17% vs 55%, p=0.025).
Conclusion TIA patients with AF are more likely than those without AF to exhibit a major hemispheric syndrome, such as aphasia.
(Internal Medicine 42: 255-258, 2003)