Can you be OK after a TIA?

Although a TIA should not have a long-term impact on your daily activities, you must stop driving immediately. If your doctor is happy that you have made a good recovery and there are no lasting effects after 1 month, you can start driving again.

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Can you live a normal life after TIA?

In the emergency room, you learned you'd had a transient ischemic attack (TIA), also known as a mini-stroke. While symptoms went away within several hours, your concern that it could happen again did not. The good news is you absolutely can live a full life after a mini-stroke.

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How long does it take to feel normal after a TIA?

This can cause sudden symptoms similar to a stroke, such as speech and visual disturbance, and numbness or weakness in the face, arms and legs. But a TIA does not last as long as a stroke. The effects last a few minutes to a few hours and fully resolve within 24 hours.

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What should you avoid after a TIA?

Do not eat too much of any single food, particularly processed foods and foods high in salt. You should limit the amount of salt you eat to no more than 6g a day because too much salt will increase your blood pressure. 6g of salt is about 1 teaspoon.

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How do you feel after having a TIA?

Around 70%reported that their TIA had long- term effects including memory loss, poor mobility, problems with speech and difficulty in understanding. 60%of people stated that their TIA had affected them emotionally. There is no way to tell whether a person is having a TIA or a stroke when the symptoms first start.

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After a Stroke or TIA: New Guidelines to Prevent Recurrence

36 related questions found

What are the chances of having a second TIA?

Most people, and even many doctors, don't realize that the risk of a second stroke is as high as 12.8 percent in the first week after a TIA (transient ischemic attack). If you do not change certain lifestyle factors, the risk of a second stroke within the next five years can be as high as 30 percent.

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What is the quality of life after TIA?

Conclusion: Quality-adjusted survival is low over the 5 years after stroke and TIA, with severity and recurrent stroke being major predictors. There remains considerable scope for improvements in acute treatment and secondary prevention to improve the quality of life after TIA and stroke.

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Do you sleep a lot after a TIA?

Fatigue can happen after any type of stroke, and you can have severe fatigue after a relatively mild stroke or a TIA. Even if you have made a full physical recovery, or your stroke was some time ago, fatigue can still be a problem.

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How do you prevent a second TIA?

Prevention
  1. Don't smoke. Stopping smoking reduces your risk of a TIA or a stroke.
  2. Limit cholesterol and fat. ...
  3. Eat plenty of fruits and vegetables. ...
  4. Limit sodium. ...
  5. Exercise regularly. ...
  6. Limit alcohol intake. ...
  7. Maintain a healthy weight. ...
  8. Don't use illicit drugs.

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Is exercise good after TIA?

Regular exercise is recommended as a means of reducing the likelihood of further stroke because it can help lower blood pressure, helps you lose weight and can alter the balance of fats in the body. Thirty minutes of activity, five days a week is enough to reduce the risk of stroke.

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What happens to your body after a TIA?

After a TIA, the blockage breaks up quickly and dissolves on its own. A TIA does not cause brain tissue to die. The loss of blood flow to an area of the brain can be caused by: A blood clot in an artery of the brain.

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What is the main cause of a TIA?

The blockage responsible for most TIAs is usually caused by a blood clot that has travelled to the blood vessels supplying the brain. A type of irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation can also cause TIAs.

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Why do I feel so tired after a TIA?

In the early weeks and months after a stroke your body is healing and the rehabilitation process takes up a lot of energy so it is very common to feel tired.

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What is the average age for a mini-stroke?

"Mini Strokes" - in 40s and 50s

The likelihood of stroke increases with age, doubling for every decade after age 55, one-third of strokes occur in people younger than 65, with particular risk in young and middle aged women. In fact, women 45 to 54 years of age are more than twice as likely as men to have a stroke.

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Do you always have another stroke after TIA?

The risk of stroke after transient ischemic attack is somewhere between 2% and 17% within the first 90 days. Among patients with transient ischemic attack, one in five will have a subsequent stroke (the most common outcome), a heart attack or die within one year.

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Do you always have a stroke after a TIA?

Will I have a stroke? It's difficult to tell for sure if someone is going to have a stroke after a TIA. But having a TIA is a major sign that you have a much higher than normal risk of having a stroke. That's why doctors work so hard to find out what caused it, and help you improve your health.

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Can TIA be caused by stress?

It has been found in a study that stress apparently raises the risk of a Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) by 59%. A TIA is a mini-stroke caused by a temporary blockage of blood flow to the brain.

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Can you avoid a stroke after TIA?

Yes. Although your risk of having a stroke is higher if you have already had a stroke or a transient ischaemic attack (also called a TIA or mini-stroke), you can reduce your risk of another stroke. It's important that you take the medication that you're prescribed, and make any lifestyle changes you need.

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What medication is given after a TIA?

Dipyridamole and aspirin — Dipyridamole is a medication that may be given after a TIA to reduce the risk of stroke. It is often given as an extended-release form, combined with aspirin (aspirin-extended-release dipyridamole, brand name: Aggrenox). It is taken two times per day.

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Do TIAs get worse over time?

The symptoms may appear harmless at first, but they may not resolve. In fact, they can worsen. For a stroke, quick medical care can minimize brain damage and reduce the risk of lasting impairments.

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Do TIAs show up on MRI?

You will likely have a head CT scan or brain MRI. A stroke may show changes on these tests, but TIAs will not.

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Do blood thinners prevent TIA?

Benefits and risks of blood-thinning medication

Taking blood-thinning medication is often one of the main ways you can reduce your risk of a stroke if you have had a stroke or TIA, or have a heart condition.

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Can the brain heal after a TIA?

TIA can and does cause persistent symptoms that won't resolve without treatment. 95% of our patients experience statistically verified restoration of brain function after treatment at our clinic.

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Who is prone to TIA?

age – although TIAs can happen at any age (including in children and young adults), they're most common in people over 55. ethnicity – people of south Asian, African or Caribbean descent have a higher TIA risk, partly because rates of diabetes and high blood pressure are higher in these groups.

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What is a TIA a warning of?

A TIA is a warning that you're at risk of having a full stroke in the near future. An assessment can help doctors determine the best way to reduce the chances of this happening.

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