TGA transiente globale Amnesie
Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a clinical syndrome with no clear etiology identified. Most symptoms are transient and resolve within a few hours.
Epidemiology
Most common in patients of older age (50-70 years old).
Clinical presentation
Anterograde and partial retrograde amnesia lasting less than 24 hours without any other neurological or congestive symptoms. Most cases show complete resolution of symptoms within a few hours from onset of symptoms.
Pathology
Several hypotheses (e.g. epileptic phenomena, stroke, focal ischemia) have been proposed with no consensus on the exact mechanism .
Radiographic features
Brain CT scan and conventional sequences of MRI brain show no abnormalities.
MRI
Prospective and retrospective studies based on a small number of TGA patients can detect small punctate regions of abnormally restricted diffusion on DWI/ADC sequences in the CA1 area of the hippocampus (lateral edge of the hippocampal gyrus abutting the temporal horn). These lesions can be bilateral and even multifocal .
Treatment and prognosis
No treatment is required and the condition tends to not recur .
Siehe auch:
- Diffusionsrestriktion Hippocampus
- hippocampale Sulcusreste
- transient global amnesia diffusion restriction