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. 2024 Jan 9;102(1):e207846.
doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207846. Epub 2023 Dec 13.

Presenting Symptoms and Diffusion-Weighted MRI Positivity by Time After Transient Neurologic Events: A Pooled Analysis of 3 Cohort Studies

Affiliations

Presenting Symptoms and Diffusion-Weighted MRI Positivity by Time After Transient Neurologic Events: A Pooled Analysis of 3 Cohort Studies

Koji Tanaka et al. Neurology. .

Abstract

Background and objective: The association between focal vs nonfocal presenting symptom and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) positivity in relation to onset-to-imaging time in patients with transient neurologic events remains unclear. We hypothesize that episodes consisting of focal symptoms would have proportionally higher DWI-positive imaging at later onset-to-imaging times.

Methods: Patients with transient neurologic symptoms and a normal neurologic examination who had DWI in the combined data set of 3 cohort studies were included. We used logistic regression models to evaluate the association between each type of presenting symptom (motor weakness, speech impairment, sensory symptoms, vision loss, diplopia, gait instability, dizziness, headache, presyncope, and amnesia) and DWI positivity after adjusting for clinical variables (age, sex, history of stroke, dyslipidemia, coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation, symptoms duration [<10, 10-59, ≥60 minutes, or unclear], and study source). We stratified the results by onset-to-imaging time categories (<6 hours, 6-23 hours, and ≥24 hours).

Results: Of the total 2,411 patients (1,345 male, median age 68 years), DWI-positive lesions were detected in 598 patients (24.8%). The prevalence of DWI positivity was highest in those with motor weakness (34.7%), followed by speech impairment (33.5%). In a multivariable analysis, the presence of motor weakness, speech impairment, and sensory symptoms was associated with DWI positivity, while vision loss and headache were associated with lower odds of DWI positivity, but nevertheless had 13.6% and 15.3% frequency of DWI positive. The odds of being DWI positive varied by onset-to-imaging time categories for motor weakness, with greater odds of being DWI positive at later imaging time (<6 hours: odds ratio [OR] 1.25, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.84-1.87; 6-23 hours: OR 2.24, 95% CI 1.47-3.42; and ≥24 hours: OR 2.42, 95% CI 1.74-3.36; interaction p = 0.033). Associations of other symptoms with DWI positivity did not vary significantly by time categories.

Discussion: We found that onset-to-imaging time influences the relationship between motor weakness and DWI positivity in patients with transient neurologic events. Compared with motor, speech, and sensory symptoms, visual or nonfocal symptoms carry a lower but still a substantive association with DWI positivity.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors report no relevant disclosures. Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Patient Inclusion Flowchart
DOUBT, Diagnosis of Uncertain-Origin Benign Transient Neurologic Symptoms; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; PROMISE-TIA, Prospective Multicenter Registry to Identify Subsequent Cardiovascular Events After Transient Ischemic Attack; SpecTRA, Spectrometry for Transient Ischemic Attack Rapid Assessment.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Presenting Symptoms and Diffusion-Weighted Imaging Positivity in Onset-to-Imaging Time Groups
CI, confidence interval; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; OR, odds ratio. Data were adjusted for age, sex, history of stroke, dyslipidemia, atrial fibrillation, coronary heart disease, symptom duration (<10, 10–59, ≥60 minutes, or unclear), and study source.

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