Abstract

Background: Recently, the [diagnosis of transient ischemic attack (TIA), DOT] score has been recognized to be a new tool for non-specialists to diagnose TIA more accurately with the sensitivity and specificity being 89 and 76%, respectively. However, the DOT score has not yet been validated externally in patients with TIA in China.Methods: We retrospectively enrolled 500 consecutive patients with transient neurological symptoms, who were admitted to the Department of Neurology, Beijing Chaoyang Hospital and underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) between Jan 2016 and Dec 2018. Patients with transient neurological symptoms were divided into two subgroups: TIA mimic group (N = 140, 28%) and definite cerebrovascular events group including tissue-based TIA (DWI negative, N = 252, 50.4%) and minor stroke (DWI positive, N = 108, 21.6%). The demographic data, clinical characteristics, laboratory findings, and scores of Dawson and DOT were compared between the two groups.Results: A total of 500 patients with transient neurological symptoms (mean age, 61.1 ± 12.8) were enrolled and 70% (N = 350) were male. Comparing with TIA mimic groups, patients with cerebrovascular events group were more likely to have higher diastolic blood pressure, uric acid and homocysteine, more motor weakness and speech abnormalities, and also scored higher using the Dawson and DOT. The area under the curve (AUC) was 0.728 for DOT, with a sensitivity of 70.3% and specificity of 62.9%, respectively.Conclusion: In patients with transient neurological symptoms, our findings showed that the DOT score had relatively good calibration and discrimination to identify of TIA in a Chinese Population. As a novel tool of TIA identification, further validations are needed in multiple centers with larger samples in China.

Highlights

  • Stroke is the second leading cause of death worldwide with an annual mortality rate of about 5.5 million [1, 2], and the first in China [3]

  • We enrolled a total of 500 patients with transient neurological symptoms, and the mean age was 61.1 ± 12.8 years, and 70% (N = 350) were male

  • Among the patients with transient neurological symptoms, we found that Transient ischemic attack (TIA) mimics (N = 140, 28%) and cerebrovascular events including tissue-based TIA (N = 252, 50.4%) and minor stroke (N = 108, 21.6%)

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Summary

Introduction

Stroke is the second leading cause of death worldwide with an annual mortality rate of about 5.5 million [1, 2], and the first in China [3]. Transient ischemic attack (TIA) is a transient episode of local neurologic dysfunction and it is a prodromal stage of stroke especially in the first few days [4]. Due to the rapid development of neuroimaging, up to one-third of patients with TIA may Validation of the DOT Score have radiological evidence of acute infarction [5, 6]. The definition of TIA is changing from “time-based TIA” to “tissue-based TIA,” which is “a transient episode of neurological dysfunction caused by focal brain, spinal cord, or retinal ischemia, without acute infarction” [10]. The DOT score has not yet been validated externally in patients with TIA in China

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