Distinguishing between a seizure and a transient ischemic attack? - transient ischemic attack more condition_symptoms
A TIA is blocked blood flow to part of the oxygen starved brain caused. Since it is) is a temporary ischemia (tissue hypoxia resolved fairly quickly, but may be a harbinger of impending stroke and must not be ignored. The event seems to be a stroke and its location in the brain determines what the symptoms (there are many varieties, such as facial paralysis and paralysis on one side of the body, may also appear as stuttering or l "Forget inappropriate words, there are many others, but you get the idea)
A seizure is considered inappropriate and unregulated, the electrical activity of the brain. It also has many different manifestations. In some attacks, the patient does not lose consciousness in others. This is not the tonic-clonic (one of which known), some as grand mal seizures, usually affects the entire body in rhythmic jolts, 'absence' seizures (seizures observed occur as known) as the end in mind and in some cases continue the body to do what they were doing when the seizure took place (THIS was the cause of road accidents, a couple identified in my area), atonic seizures are those in which the person touches the ground only a complete lack of control over the muscles (like fainting, but lost it, not always), myoclonic Consciousness is a short and fast-twitch muscles of the body (it's like a tick on the whole body)
Hope this helps
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Transient Ischemic Attack More Condition_symptoms Distinguishing Between A Seizure And A Transient Ischemic Attack?
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2 comments:
TIA may be different than the word is apparently meaningless and / or return ... not correctly processed by the brain, the words of the person believes to be right, but we hear otherwise. In addition, a minimum of possible paralysis of the face and / or arm.
A seizure is a little more, paralyzing most of TIA.
The doctors are probably right to do so. See one of them.
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