Abstract

Abstract Case Report A 42–year–old woman was carried to emergency room lamenting sudden memory loss. Her husband witnessed the onset of the episode. No recent head trauma was reported, blood pressure was under control. Anterograde and retrograde memory loss was present and confirmed by a neurologist. No other neurological signs were elicitable. Blood exams and toxicological analysis were negative. ECG, chest radiography, and cerebral TC showed no abnormalities. At physical examination a carotid bruit could be appreciated. The patient was asymptomatic. Subsequently an eco–colour–Doppler of carotid artery was performed showing a left common and internal carotid artery dissection. The diagnosis of ICA dissection was confirmed with a contrast CT furthermore excluding the coexistence of an aortic dissection. The anterograde amnesia resolved 15 h after the admission. A neurologist confirmed that the patient experimented an episode of transient global amnesia. After a vascular surgery consultation, a conservative treatment was deemed appropriate. After a 6 month follow up the patient didn’t complain of any other neurological symptom or sign. Transient global amnesia (TGA) is characterized by reversible anterograde and retrograde amnesia of sudden onset that resolves spontaneously within 24 h. The pathophysiological mechanisms underlying this puzzling neurological syndrome are yet not completely clarified. Some studies support an ischemic aetiology for TGA and cases of TGA following ICA–stenting or aortic dissection with involvement of the supra–aortic branches are reported in literature, thus supporting the hypothesis that a cause–effect relationship between ischemic pathologies of supra–aortic trunks and TGA might be present. In the case here presented, a Doppler ultrasound of carotid arteries performed in a patient presenting with TGA, asymptomatic for neck pain, led to a diagnosis of ICA dissection. In order to not miss a spontaneous ICA dissection as a rare ethology of TGA, we suggesto perform an eco–colour–Doppler of the epi–aortic vessels in patients affected by such amnesic syndrome.

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