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Abcd2 Score Calculator

Predict short-term stroke risk after a transient ischemic attack using the ABCD2 score. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.

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Formula

ABCD2 = Age + Blood Pressure + Clinical Features + Duration + Diabetes

A = Age >= 60 (1 point). B = Blood pressure >= 140/90 (1 point). C = Clinical features: unilateral weakness (2 points) or speech disturbance without weakness (1 point). D = Duration: >= 60 min (2 points) or 10-59 min (1 point). D = Diabetes (1 point). Total range: 0-7 points.

Worked Examples

Example 1: High-Risk TIA Patient

Problem: A 72-year-old diabetic woman presents with right arm weakness lasting 45 minutes. Blood pressure is 165/95 mmHg. Calculate the ABCD2 score.

Solution: Age >= 60: +1\nBlood Pressure >= 140/90: +1\nClinical Features - Unilateral weakness: +2\nDuration 10-59 minutes: +1\nDiabetes - Yes: +1\n\nTotal ABCD2 Score = 1 + 1 + 2 + 1 + 1 = 6

Result: ABCD2 Score: 6/7 (High Risk) | 2-day stroke risk: 8.1% | Hospital admission recommended

Example 2: Low-Risk TIA Patient

Problem: A 52-year-old non-diabetic man presents with a 5-minute episode of speech difficulty without weakness. Blood pressure is 128/78 mmHg. Calculate the ABCD2 score.

Solution: Age < 60: 0\nBlood Pressure < 140/90: 0\nClinical Features - Speech disturbance without weakness: +1\nDuration < 10 minutes: 0\nDiabetes - No: 0\n\nTotal ABCD2 Score = 0 + 0 + 1 + 0 + 0 = 1

Result: ABCD2 Score: 1/7 (Low Risk) | 2-day stroke risk: 1.0% | Outpatient workup may be appropriate

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the ABCD2 score and what does it predict?

The ABCD2 score is a clinical prediction tool designed to estimate the short-term risk of stroke following a transient ischemic attack (TIA). Developed by Johnston and colleagues and published in The Lancet in 2007, it combines five easily assessable clinical features: Age (60 or older), Blood pressure (elevated systolic at or above 140 or diastolic at or above 90), Clinical features (unilateral weakness scores highest, speech disturbance without weakness scores intermediate), Duration of symptoms (longer episodes score higher), and Diabetes status. The total score ranges from 0 to 7, with higher scores indicating greater stroke risk within 2, 7, and 90 days after the TIA event. It helps clinicians decide which patients need urgent hospital admission versus outpatient evaluation.

How reliable is the ABCD2 score for clinical decision making?

The ABCD2 score has moderate predictive value but should not be used in isolation. Validation studies show it has good discrimination for identifying high-risk patients, with a c-statistic of approximately 0.62 to 0.83 depending on the population studied. However, a low ABCD2 score does not rule out significant pathology. Studies have found that patients with low scores can still have significant carotid stenosis, atrial fibrillation, or diffusion-weighted imaging abnormalities that require urgent intervention. Current guidelines from the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association recommend that the ABCD2 score be used in conjunction with clinical judgment, brain imaging including MRI with DWI, vascular imaging, and cardiac evaluation rather than as a standalone triage tool.

How does the ABCD2 score compare to newer TIA risk tools?

Several refined tools have been developed to improve upon the ABCD2 score. The ABCD3-I score adds imaging findings including diffusion-weighted imaging abnormality and large-vessel stenosis, improving discrimination with a c-statistic improvement of approximately 0.10 over the original score. The Canadian TIA Score incorporates first TIA status, history of vertebrobasilar symptoms, antiplatelet use, and specific examination findings. The DAWNING score includes imaging and cardiac biomarkers. Current evidence suggests that combining the ABCD2 score with imaging findings provides significantly better risk stratification than the clinical score alone. Some centers have moved toward a unified rapid-access TIA clinic model that evaluates all TIA patients urgently regardless of score, reflecting the understanding that even low-risk patients benefit from rapid evaluation.

Is my data stored or sent to a server?

No. All calculations run entirely in your browser using JavaScript. No data you enter is ever transmitted to any server or stored anywhere. Your inputs remain completely private.

Does Abcd2 Score Calculator work offline?

Once the page is loaded, the calculation logic runs entirely in your browser. If you have already opened the page, most calculators will continue to work even if your internet connection is lost, since no server requests are needed for computation.

How do I get the most accurate result?

Enter values as precisely as possible using the correct units for each field. Check that you have selected the right unit (e.g. kilograms vs pounds, meters vs feet) before calculating. Rounding inputs early can reduce output precision.

References