Suggest Treatment For TIA
you need to control the cardiovascular risk factors
Detailed Answer:
Hello,
it seems that you had a TIA, which is good and bad... The good thing is that TIA is transient, so you don't have any neurological deficits (or at least no obvious deficits). The bad thing is that since you've had a TIA, you're prone to stroke and in fact you have a high chance to have a stroke in the near future. That's why you have to control as much as you can what affects your risk for strokes. The blood pressure is one of them.
Do not consider a high blood pressure as an immediate risk for stroke because it isn't. High blood pressures negatively affect the arteries and cause plaque formation, which may cause strokes and other untoward events. This is not an immediate process. It takes time... Therefore you should make sure that you get your blood pressure under control but don't be afraid of transient high readings (unless they're too high of course, like higher than 200mmHg).
You should also watch your cholesterol, blood glucose and live a healthy life (including a healthy diet and a healthy body weight). The target levels for blood pressure are around 130/80mmHg, not exceeding 140/90mmHg.
I hope you find my comments helpful!
You can contact me again, if you'd like any clarification or further information.
Kind Regards!
it depends...
Detailed Answer:
You're welcome!
The answer depends on how you want to approach this subject. With current knowledge more than 5% of patients with TIA will have a stroke later in the same year. Older data suggested an even higher percent. You may never have a stroke or you may have one tomorrow. Nobody knows or can foresee. What you can do is what I've mentioned in my previous answer and of course smoking cessation. Smoking does a lot of harm in the body including increasing the risk for cardiovascular events. I believe you didn't mention smoking at first, so I have to be more emphatic about it now that you did.
If you had to choose a single action against strokes, myocardial infarctions, etc then smoking cessation would have been the most efficient. Smoking is the absolute number 1 factor and you should definitely do something about it soon. The sooner the better. Remember that current damage from past smoking cannot be reversed. You can only stop future damage.
Regarding the diagnosis, TIA is defined as a stroke like clinical entity that resolves completely within 24 hours. No sign of stroke should be evident on an MRI for example and no neurological deficit should remain. Your description fits the definition without doubt.
Kind Regards!