Mechanism of Syncope in Patients With Isolated Syncope and in Patients With Tilt-Positive Syncope
Author(s) -
Andrés Moyá,
Michele Brignole,
C. Menozzi,
Roberto García–Civera,
Stefano Tognarini,
Lluı́s Mont,
Gianluca Botto,
Franco Giada,
D Cornacchia
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/hc3601.095708
Subject(s) - medicine , syncope (phonology) , presyncope , bradycardia , vasovagal syncope , cardiology , sinus bradycardia , tilt table test , heart rate , anesthesia , sinus rhythm , implantable loop recorder , tachycardia , atrial fibrillation , blood pressure
Background Because of its episodic behavior, the correlation of spontaneous syncope with an abnormal finding can be considered a reference standard.Methods and Results We inserted an implantable loop recorder in 111 patients with syncope, absence of significant structural heart disease, and a normal ECG; tilt-testing was negative in 82 (isolated syncope) and positive in 29 (tilt-positive). The patients had had ≥3 episodes of syncope in the previous 2 years and were followed up for 3 to 15 months. Results were similar in the isolated syncope group and the tilt-positive group: syncope recurred in 28 (34%) and 10 patients (34%), respectively, and electrocardiographic correlation was found in 24 (23%) and 8 (28%) patients, respectively. The most frequent finding, which was recorded in 46% and 62% of patients, respectively, was one or more prolonged asystolic pauses, mainly due to sinus arrest, preceded for a few minutes by progressive bradycardia or progressive tachycardia-bradycardia. Bradycardia without pauses was observed in 8% and 12% of cases, respectively. The remaining patients had normal sinus rhythm or sinus tachycardia, except for one, who had ectopic atrial tachycardia. In the tilt-positive group, an asystolic syncope was also recorded when the type of response to tilt-testing was vasodepressor or mixed. Presyncopal episodes were never characterized by asystolic pauses; normal sinus rhythm was the most frequent finding.Conclusions Homogeneous findings were observed during syncope. In most patients, the likely cause was neurally-mediated, and the most frequent mechanism was a bradycardic reflex. In the other cases, a normal sinus rhythm was frequently recorded. Presyncope was not an accurate surrogate for syncope in establishing a diagnosis.
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