Introduction
Transient ischemic attack (TIA) increases the risk of stroke Reference Amarenco, Lavallée and Labreuche1 ; this risk remains elevated for up to 5 years, even for clinically stable patients with TIA with no recurrent events in the early high-risk period. Reference Edwards, Kapral, Fang and Swartz2 TIA can be difficult to diagnose clinically and interobserver agreement of the involved territory among physicians is poor. Reference Flossman, Redgrave, Briley and Rothwell3 Clinical guidelines currently recommend the use of diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) in the investigation of patients with TIA and minor stroke to confirm cerebral ischemia and assess risk of recurrent ischemic events. Reference Wintermark, Sanelli and Albers4 Recent multicenter registry data have shown that the presence of acute DWI lesions after minor stroke or TIA is predictive of recurrent stroke at 90 d, but not at 1 or 5 years. Reference Amarenco, Lavallee and Labreuche5,Reference Amarenco, Lavallée and Monteiro Tavares6
However, the detection of acute DWI positivity after TIA symptoms remains variable. A previous meta-analysis of 45 studies involving 9078 patients with TIA reported pooled estimates for DWI positivity of only 34.3%, reporting an unexplained 7-fold variation in positivity across studies. Reference Brazzelli, Chappell and Miranda7 Findings from a TIA registry of 4789 patients at 61 sites similarly reported evidence of acute brain infarction in only 33.4%, Reference Amarenco, Lavallee and Labreuche5 suggesting that DWI provides inconsistent evidence of cerebral ischemia in those with suspected TIA. It is also well established that the hyperintensity of DWI lesions in patients with TIA or minor stroke decreases in intensity after 10 d and resolves early after the acute phase, reducing the diagnostic yield of DWI. Reference Moreau, Modi and Almekhlafi8 Further, prior reports have shown that up to 61% of patients with TIA delay presenting to medical care Reference Hurst, Lee, Sideso, Giles and Handa9 and a FAST-based public education campaign did not improve delays or failure to seek attention in those with TIA or minor stroke. Reference Wolters, Li, Gutnikov, Mehta and Rothwell10 These data indicate that for many individuals with suspected, particularly those with a delayed presentation, DWI may be an unreliable measure to confirm cerebral ischemia.
Previous work has demonstrated that intracortical excitability, measured using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), is altered after TIA. Reference Wong, Chen and Kao11-Reference Edwards, Meehan, Levy, Teal, Linsdell and Boyd13 Specifically, with paired-pulse methods, several prior studies have shown that short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) and intracortical facilitation (ICF) are asymmetric between the TIA-affected and TIA-unaffected primary motor cortices, independent of the presence of acute changes on structural imaging Reference Koerner and Meinck12,Reference Edwards, Meehan, Levy, Teal, Linsdell and Boyd13 and may persist for up to 14 d post-TIA symptom onset. Reference Edwards, Meehan, Levy, Teal, Linsdell and Boyd13 Further, hemispheric asymmetries in intracortical excitation are significantly correlated with the ABCD2 score Reference Edwards, Meehan, Levy, Teal, Linsdell and Boyd13 and show potential utility to discriminate TIA from migraine aura without headache. Reference Naeije, Fogang, Ligot and Mavroudakis14 Thus, similar to observations in subacute stroke populations, Reference Butefisch, Wessling, Netz, Seitz and Homberg15 TMS-derived markers of altered cortical excitability may show widespread alterations in both the TIA-affected and unaffected hemispheres after TIA and provide additional diagnostic information for the evaluation of TIA.
The objectives of the present study were to: (1) determine whether thresholds for intracortical excitability are associated with clinical TIA diagnoses and imaging-based evidence of cerebral ischemia in a prospective cohort of individuals presenting with symptoms of TIA and (2) to compare the diagnostic accuracy of TMS-derived thresholds of SICI and ICF to the clinical classification of TIA. The primary hypothesis was that thresholds of intracortical excitability would be associated with a clinical diagnosis of TIA and a secondary hypothesis was that they would have increased discriminative utility compared to the clinical TIA classification.
Methods
Study Design
Individuals presenting with symptoms of TIA (N = 23; mean age = 61 ± 12) were prospectively recruited from a tertiary care Stroke Prevention Clinic at the Vancouver General Hospital within 60 d of symptom onset (mean = 19 d; range = 7–57). Inclusion criteria were: TIA with unilateral motor or somatosensory symptoms and resolution of symptoms within 24 h. Exclusion criteria were: contraindications to TMS, including prior history of stroke, seizures, or epilepsy and family history of epilepsy, and contraindications to MRI. All participants underwent sessions of multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including DWI, and single and paired-pulse TMS at baseline. The University of British Columbia research ethics board approved all aspects of the study protocol, and informed consent was obtained for each participant in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.
Study Variables
The study exposures were the clinical classification of TIA (i.e., TIA versus TIA-mimic), confirmed by the evaluating stroke neurologist, and imaging-based evidence of cerebral ischemia, indexed by DWI lesion status (i.e., positivity or negativity) on the baseline imaging examination, as rated by two independent neuroradiologists. The primary outcome was TMS-derived thresholds for short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) and intracortical facilitation (ICF) in the TIA-affected and TIA-unaffected hemispheres.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Acquisition
MR acquisition was conducted at the University of British Columbia MRI Research Centre on a Philips Achieva 3.0T whole body MRI scanner (Philips Healthcare, Best, The Netherlands), using an eight-channel sensitivity encoding head coil and parallel imaging. All participants received a three-dimensional T1-weighted MPRAGE scan (TR = 7.722 ms, TE = 3.58, flip angle θ = 8°, SENSE factor= 2, FOV = 256 × 170 × 200 mm, 1 mm3 isotropic voxels) and diffusion MRI using a single-shot spin echo DwiSE sequence (TR = 7465 ms, TE = 60 ms, FOV = 212 × 1312 mm, 60 slices, voxel dimensions = 2.2 × 2.2 × 2.2 mm3).
DWI Lesion Identification
DWI scans were evaluated and rated for lesion positivity by two independent neuroradiologists (FG, KH) at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto. Kappa statistics were performed to evaluate interrater reliability for lesion identification. Reference Kvalseth16 Discrepancies in lesion ratings were subsequently resolved via consensus meeting among members of the study team prior to analyses.
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)
Cortical motor excitability was assessed with single and paired-pulse TMS, delivered through a figure-of-eight coil connected to two Magstim 2002 stimulators (Magstim Co., Wales, UK). Motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) were recorded using surface electromyography (EMG) placed over bilateral abductor pollicis brevis (APB). EMG data were collected using LabChart 7.0 software, in conjunction with a Powerlab EMG acquisition/amplification system (AD Instruments, Colorado Springs, USA). EMG signals were sampled at 2000 Hz, amplified ×1000, and band-pass filtered at 10–1000 Hz. Data were recorded from 100 ms prior to 350 ms after TMS delivery.
Single TMS pulses were delivered to localize the ‘hotspot’ that reliably elicited MEPs in the contralateral APB. Brainsight™ neuronavigation software (Rogue Research Inc., Montreal, Canada) was used to stereotaxically register the TMS coil with individual T1-weighted MR images and target stimulation over the hotspot. Resting motor threshold was identified as the lowest stimulator output intensity to elicit an MEP of 50 μV in 5 out of 10 trials. Active motor threshold (AMT) was the lowest intensity to elicit a MEP of 200 μV in 5 out of 10 trials, while the participant actively engaged APB isometrically at 20% of their maximum voluntary contraction, measured using a handgrip dynamometer (AD Instruments, Colorado Springs, USA). Force output during voluntary contraction was digitized and presented on a screen in front of the participant for visual feedback.
Paired Pulse TMS Protocol
Paired pulse TMS data were acquired according to a modified recruitment curve protocol. Reference Edwards, Meehan and Linsdell17 A subthreshold conditioning stimulus (CS) was followed by a suprathreshold test stimulus (TS), set to the output intensity required to consistently evoke an MEP of 1000 μV in the relaxed APB. Mean TS MEP amplitudes are summarized in Supplementary Table 1. Interstimulus intervals (ISI) were set to 12 ms to induce ICF and 2 ms for SICI. Recruitment curves for ICF and SICI were generated by holding TS and ISI constant, while varying the CS intensity in 20% increments from 35% to 95%, and 110%, 125% and 140% of AMT for ICF and from 35% to 95% of AMT for SICI. Eight trials at each CS intensity, plus 8 pulses of unconditioned stimuli, were delivered randomly for a total of 64 pulses for ICF and 40 pulses for SICI. The order of paired pulse delivery was counterbalanced across participants for hemisphere and ISI. Both SICI and ICF were collected in one hemisphere before switching to the second hemisphere. The order of data collection (TIA-affected and unaffected Hemispheres, ICF and SICI) was pseudo-randomized across participants.
Thresholds for SICI and ICF
Thresholds for ICF and SICI were derived using methods previously described. Reference Edwards, Meehan and Linsdell17 Briefly, peak-to-peak MEP amplitudes for each hemisphere and ISI were calculated and trials exceeding two standard deviations of the mean amplitude were excluded. MEP amplitude was plotted as a function of %CS intensity, and a quadratic regression function was fit to these data to derive the minimum CS intensity at which MEP amplitude exceeded variability at 0% CS (baseline variability plus/minus one standard error of the estimate). This method has previously been shown to have greater reliability than paired-pulse methods based on averaged responses from a single conditioning stimulus intensity. Reference Orth, Snijders and Rothwell18 These values represent the threshold required to elicit inhibition (SICI) or facilitation (ICF) in each participant (Figure 1).
Statistical Analyses
Descriptive statistics were generated to characterize the study cohort for demographic and clinical variables (SPSS 20.0; IBM Corp., Armonk, N.Y., USA) (Table 1). For the primary analysis, multivariate linear regression was used to estimate associations between the clinical diagnosis of TIA and DWI positivity and thresholds for SICI and ICF in the TIA-affected and TIA-unaffected hemispheres, adjusting for age, sex, and time since symptom onset, using a backward elimination fit selection. Final models were evaluated for overall significance, and the significance of the addition of each predictor variable into the model was assessed by adjusted R2 values.
DWI = diffusion-weighted imaging; TIA = transient ischemic attack; SD = standard deviation; LH = left hemisphere; RH = right hemisphere; ABCD2 = clinical score including parameters of age, blood pressure, clinical features of TIA, duration of TIA, presence of diabetes.
Secondary analyses were performed to assess the diagnostic utility of TMS-derived thresholds for SICI and ICF using a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) approach, with the clinical diagnosis of TIA by the evaluating stroke neurologist set as the classification variable (i.e., gold standard) (MedCalc 18.6; Broekstraat, Mariakerke, Belgium). Area under the curve (AUC) values for TMS-derived SICI and ICF thresholds in the TIA- affected and TIA-unaffected hemispheres were calculated, with values less than 0.7, between 0.7 and 0.9, or greater than 0.9 representing low, moderate, and high diagnostic accuracies, respectively. Due to the small sample size, AUC values were only calculated for TMS thresholds and not for the DWI-based confirmation of cerebral ischemia. In an additional exploratory analysis, AUCs for each test were compared both within the overall cohort and separately for clinical subgroups of interest, including women vs. men, age <65 vs. 65+ and time since symptom onset <7 d vs. 7+ days; p-values less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant.
Results
The cohort was comprised of 23 individuals presenting with unilateral motor or somatosensory TIA symptoms (mean age = 61 ± 12). Within the cohort, 13 (56.5%) were clinically diagnosed as TIA by the evaluating stroke neurologist and 10 (43.5%) were not clinically confirmed as TIA. Kappa statistics showed poor agreement among neuroradiologist raters for DWI positivity (Kappa = 0.01, SE = 0.08), consistent with prior evidence of a lower diagnostic yield when DWI is delayed in relation to symptom onset. Reference Moreau, Modi and Almekhlafi8 Discrepancies were resolved via consensus yielding 3 individuals (13.0%) with evidence of DWI positivity. Demographic and clinical characteristics of the study cohort are presented in Table 1. Chi-square, Fisher exact, and t-test comparisons showed no significant differences between those with a clinical TIA diagnosis or those that showed imaging-based evidence of cerebral ischemia on demographic or clinical variables (p > .05).
In the primary analysis, multivariate linear regression showed a significant association between the clinical classification of TIA and increased thresholds for SICI (i.e., reduced inhibition) in the TIA-unaffected hemisphere, after adjusting for age, sex, and time since symptom onset (days) (p = 0.04; Table 2). However, no significant associations between DWI positivity and thresholds for cortical excitability were observed in this cohort (all p > 0.05) (Table 2).
TIA=transient ischemic attack; DWI=diffusion-weighted imaging.
† Adjusted for age, sex, time since symptom onset (days)
Secondary analyses to estimate AUC values from the ROC indicated that, for the overall cohort, thresholds for SICI and ICF showed low to moderate ability to discriminate TIA. Thresholds for SICI in the TIA-unaffected hemisphere showed the highest level of discriminability (0.70) and thresholds for ICF in the TIA-affected hemisphere had the lowest level of discriminability (0.57) (Table 3). Further an exploratory analysis of discriminability by age, sex and time since symptoms onset revealed that the performance of all diagnostic tests was higher in individuals over the age of 65, with AUC values for SICI thresholds in both the TIA-affected and TIA-unaffected hemispheres increasing to moderate-high levels (0.86) (Table 3). There also appeared to be differences in performance by sex, with women showing the highest TIA discriminability for thresholds for ICF in the TIA- affected hemisphere (0.75) and men showing the highest discriminability for thresholds for SICI in the TIA-unaffected hemisphere (0.76), although the sample size for these analyses was very low. While there was insufficient test data acquired within 7 d after symptom onset to perform an ROC analysis, the performance of all diagnostic tests at 8+ days after symptom onset was low-moderate.
TIA = transient ischemic attack; ICF = intracortical facilitation; SICI = short-interval intracortical inhibition.
Discussion
In this study, we evaluated associations between TMS-derived thresholds for intracortical excitability, clinical TIA diagnosis, and DWI positivity. We also compared the discriminative performance of excitability thresholds to the clinical classification of TIA. Although limited by the small sample size, we found a significant association between the clinical classification of TIA (i.e., TIA versus TIA-mimic) and increases in the threshold for motor cortical inhibition (i.e., reduced inhibition) in the TIA-unaffected hemisphere. No relationships between DWI lesion status and TMS-derived thresholds after TIA were observed. Findings also demonstrated that TMS-derived thresholds of intracortical excitability show low-moderate discriminative ability compared to the clinical classification of TIA. Although these findings require investigation in a larger cohort, they suggest that TMS-derived markers of altered cortical excitability may have potential discriminative utility for the classification of TIA.
The finding that increased thresholds for SICI (i.e., reduced inhibition) in the TIA-unaffected hemisphere were associated with the clinical diagnosis of TIA is consistent with previous paired-pulse TMS studies demonstrating disrupted intracortical excitability contralesionally poststroke. Reference Butefisch, Wessling, Netz, Seitz and Homberg15,Reference Liepert, Hamzei and Weiller19-Reference Butefisch21 In subacute stroke patients with upper extremity impairment, inhibitory effects of the conditioning stimulus have been shown to be abnormally reduced in contralesional M1 at higher stimulation intensities, indicating an overall shift toward excitatory activity poststroke, Reference Butefisch, Wessling, Netz, Seitz and Homberg15,Reference Liepert, Hamzei and Weiller19 which may reflect early reorganizational processes in the contralesional hemisphere and support early functional recovery. Reference Shimizu, Hosaki and Hino20,Reference Butefisch21 The present findings indicate that these processes may begin at even the earliest stage of ischemic injury and are associated with clinical features of transient ischemia with unilateral sensorimotor symptoms. While our findings are also consistent with prior reports of alterations in intracortical excitability after TIA, Reference Wong, Chen and Kao11-Reference Edwards, Meehan, Levy, Teal, Linsdell and Boyd13 there were also notable differences. Unlike the present study, Koerner et al. Reference Koerner and Meinck12 demonstrated reduced SICI in the affected hemisphere in patients with TIA. However, the focus of that study was on patients with very short TIA duration, symptoms <60 min, which may account for differences in the extent of intracortical changes distal to the involved territory, as observed in the present study. Taken together, these data suggest that TMS-derived markers of cortical excitability may have a role in confirming the clinical classification of TIA. Yet a number of questions remain and further research is required to: (1) determine the extent of intracortical and transcallosal alterations in patients with TIA and (2) delineate potential differences among subtypes of patients with TIA of different etiologies and symptom duration.
The relationship between the clinical characteristics of TIA and DWI positivity is still controversial. While some studies have reported that DWI provides information useful to confirm the clinical diagnosis or vascular territory after TIA Reference Schulz, Briley, Meagher, Molyneux and Rothwell22 and that baseline DWI volume is predictive of new lesions at 7 d in those with TIA or minor stroke, Reference Asdaghi, Hameed, Saini, Jeerakathil, Emery and Butcher23 others have shown no association between DWI positivity and symptom duration or ABCD2 score Reference Gon, Sakaguchi, Okazaki, Mochizuki and Kitagawa24 and report similar long-term stroke risks among DWI-positive and DWI- negative patients with TIA. Reference Anticoli, Pezzella and Pozzessere25 A recent meta-analysis evaluating rates of DWI positivity reported a pooled prevalence of 33.4%, with a 7-fold DWI-positive variation across studies and indicated that available evidence does not account for why 2/3 of patients with TIA with specialist confirmed TIA have negative DWI findings. Reference Brazzelli, Chappell and Miranda7 Evidence for low interrater agreement for DWI lesion status and the lack of relationship between TMS-derived excitability thresholds and DWI positivity in the present study provides further evidence for the variability in DWI signal changes after TIA. Our findings suggest that alterations in cortical excitability can be measured in the absence of focal abnormalities on DWI in patients with TIA and merit further exploration to determine the utility for the classification of TIA.
In addition to an observed association with the clinical diagnosis of TIA, the threshold for SICI in the TIA-unaffected hemisphere showed the strongest discriminability for the classification of TIA in the overall cohort, with AUC values higher than that of the other TMS-derived excitability thresholds. Importantly, the discriminative performance of all excitability thresholds increased substantially for patients with TIA over the age of 65, with inhibitory thresholds showing high discriminability for this subgroup. Further, differential discriminative effects emerged for women vs. men, with thresholds for ICF performing highest among women and inhibitory thresholds showing the highest discriminability for men. These data provide preliminary evidence that TMS-derived excitability thresholds show potential utility for the classification of TIA and also support the potential need for individualized protocols based on patient factors including sex and age at TIA onset. However, given the small sample sizes for these subgroup analyses, our findings should be interpreted as exploratory and require confirmation in a larger cohort in future research.
Strengths of the current study included the prospective collection of TMS and DWI measures in patients with clinical features of TIA, which reduced the potential for selection bias in this cohort. The use of neuro-navigation to target M1 for stimulation reduced the potential for measurement error in TMS acquisition. The current study had several limitations. The sample size was limited and thus, findings regarding the discriminative utility of thresholds for cortical excitability require replication in a larger cohort. The prevalence of DWI positive cases was markedly lower in the present cohort (13.0%) than in previous studies (pooled estimates: 33%), potentially limiting our power to detect relationships among TMS-derived thresholds for cortical excitability and DWI positivity. It is also possible that for some participants, DWI positive lesions resolved by the time of MRI and TMS collection. Yet this finding illustrates the potential utility of using paired pulse TMS in this population; changes to intracortical excitability may persist for a longer time period than transient ischemic signal on DWI imaging. TMS data are known to be variable between and within subjects. To address this limitation, we employed a threshold-based measure of paired-pulse intracortical excitability, fitting a quadratic curve to TMS-evoked responses across a range of stimulation intensities. This method is more time-consuming to collect than paired-pulse measures based on averaging trials across a single CS intensity; however, threshold-based measures have higher reliability than paired-pulse estimates at a single conditioning stimulus intensity. Reference Orth, Snijders and Rothwell18 Finally, as comprehensive data on vascular comorbidities were not available for all participants, we did not adjust for comorbid conditions in our multivariate models.
Conclusion
Although DWI is recommended acutely to confirm cerebral ischemia in individuals with suspected TIA, the rapid resolution of DWI hyperintensities and high degree of variability for DWI positivity in clinically defined TIA suggests DWI is an unreliable measure of ischemia. Thus, new measures for the detection of cerebral ischemia are required that show increased reliability across longer durations post TIA. In the current study, TMS-derived markers of cortical excitability were associated with clinical TIA diagnosis but not DWI positivity in a cohort of patients with TIA up to 2 months post TIA event. Our findings provide preliminary evidence for the potential utility of TMS-based measures in a small prospective TIA cohort and illustrate the need for future investigations in larger cohorts.
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Operating Grant (MOP-110985) awarded to LAB. JDE and JKF also received salary funding from CIHR. LAB received salary support from the Canada Research Chairs and Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research.
Disclosures
The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.
Statement of Authorship
JDE and LAB were responsible for the design of the study, all data analyses, and interpretation and manuscript preparation and editing. JDE was also responsible for all data acquisition. JKF was responsible for data analysis and interpretation and manuscript editing. FG and KH were responsible for interpretation of the MRI imaging data and manuscript review and editing.
Supplementary Material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/cjn.2021.62.