# Transient Global Amnesia After Screening Esophagogastroduodenoscopy: Incidence and Risk Factors in a 20‐Year Single‐Center Cohort

**Authors:** Miyuki Kobayashi, Ichiro Takayama, Masahiko Ohtaka, Yasuaki Ishida, Yu Hihara, Mika Miura, Kenji Hosoda, Yuichi Hirose, Kazuhiko Takaso, Yoshioki Yoda, Fumikazu Kobayashi, Hiroshi Yokomichi, Nobuyuki Enomoto

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/deo2.70298 · DEN Open · 2026-02-10

## TL;DR

This study finds that transient global amnesia after esophagogastroduodenoscopy is rare but linked to factors like age, gender, and procedure route.

## Contribution

The study reports the first large-scale analysis of TGA incidence and risk factors after screening EGD.

## Key findings

- TGA occurred in 0.0152% of 420,979 EGD procedures.
- Transoral insertion was associated with higher TGA risk compared to transnasal insertion.
- Older age, female sex, and treated dyslipidemia were significant risk factors for TGA.

## Abstract

Transient global amnesia (TGA) after esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) has been described only in case reports. Because sudden‐onset amnesia can mimic stroke and other acute central nervous system disorders, TGA requires careful differentiation in the acute setting, and clinicians need to be familiar with this condition. We estimated its incidence after screening EGD and identified associated risk factors in a large single‐center cohort.

We retrospectively reviewed 420,979 screening EGDs at a single health checkup center (April 2005–March 2025). All EGDs were performed without sedation, using topical pharyngeal anesthesia only. TGA cases were ascertained from the endoscopy adverse‐event registry and confirmed. For analyses, three non‐TGA controls per TGA case (1:3 ratio) were randomly selected from examinees undergoing EGD on the same calendar date, using same‐day matching. Odds ratios (ORs) were estimated using conditional logistic regression.

TGA occurred in 64 episodes in 63 individuals of 420,979 examinations (0.0152%). In route‐specific analyses from April 2008, the transoral route carried a higher risk than the transnasal route (Fisher's exact test p = 0.013). In multivariable matched models, older age (odds ratio [OR] 2.32 per 10‐year increase; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.38–3.92), female sex (14.6; 4.82–43.9), transoral insertion (10.2; 1.88–55.4), and treated dyslipidemia (2.84; 1.20–6.73) were statistically associated. EGD time and endoscopist experience were not associated.

The incidence of post‐EGD TGA was very low at 15.2 per 100,000 examinations (0.0152%). Older age, female sex, transoral insertion, and treated dyslipidemia were independently associated with post‐EGD TGA. A transnasal approach might be a potential risk‐reduction strategy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** transient global amnesia (MONDO:0001617), dyslipidemia (MONDO:0002525)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** central nervous system disorders (MESH:D002493), dyslipidemia (MESH:D050171), stroke (MESH:D020521), TGA (MESH:D020236), Global Amnesia (MESH:D000647)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

14 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12888846/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12888846