Title: Evaluation and Management of Syncope
1Evaluation and Management of Syncope
2Syncope
- Definition
- Sudden transient loss of consciousness and
postural tone with subsequent spontaneous
recovery. ( Greek synkope, cessation, pause). - Transient inadequate cerebral perfusion.
3Syncope - Epidemiology
- 1 of hospital admissions
- 3 of ER visits
- 6 annual incidence in the elderly
- Upto 50 of young adults have history of isolated
LOC - Annual cost 2 B (2005)
- Clin
Electrophysiol 221386,1999
Sun BC, Am J Cardiol 95668, 2005
4Syncope - Prognosis
- Highest mortality in patients with cardiac cause
- Neurally mediated syncope/ medication induced
syncope did not increase mortality - Soteriades ES, et al N
Eng J Med 347878, 2002
5Causes of Syncope
- Vascular ( 58 62 ) Reflex mediated,
orthostatic, anatomic - Cardiac ( 10 23 ) Arrhythmias, anatomic
- Neurologic/cerebrovascular ( 0.5 5 )
- Metabolic/drugs ( 0 2 )
- Psychogenic ( 0.2 1.5 )
- Syncope of unknown origin ( 14 18 )
Sarasin FP, Am J Med 111 177, 2001 Alboni P,
JACC 37, 1921, 2001
6Differential Diagnosis of Syncope
Obstruction to Flow Aortic Stenosis Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Atrial Myxoma Mitral Stenosis Pulmonic Stenosis Pulmonary Hypertension Pulmonary Embolism Cardiac Tamponade Aortic Dissection Bradyarrhythmias Sinus Node Dysfunction AV Block Pacemaker Malfunction Tachyarhythmias Ventricular Tachycardia Torsade de Pointes Supraventricular Tachycardia Other Causes of Syncope Vasovagal Syncope Carotid Sinus Hypersensitivity Drug-Induced Orthostatic Hypotension Cerbrovascular Disease Situational (e.g. cough/micturition syncope) Hypoglycemia Seizure Psychogenic
7Syncope - Clinical Features Suggestive of
Specific Causes
Symptom or Finding Diagnostic Consideration
After sudden unexpected pain, unpleasant sight, sound or smell Vasovagal syncope
During/immediately after micturition, cough, swallow or defecation Situational syncope
On standing Orthostatic hypotension
Prolonged standing Vasovagal syncope
8Syncope Clinical Features Suggestive of
Specific Causes (contd )
Symptom or Finding Diagnostic Consideration
Well-trained athlete after exertion Neurally mediated
Change in position ( from sitting to lying, bending, turning over in bed ) Atrial myxoma, thrombus
Syncope during exertion Aortic stenosis, pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary embolus, mitral stenosis, IHSS, CAD, neurally mediated syncope
9Syncope Clinical Features Suggestive of
Specific Causes ( contd )
Symptom or Finding Diagnostic Consideration
With head rotation, pressure on cartoid sinus (as in tumors, shaving, tight collars) Cartoid sinus syncope
Associated with vertigo, dysarthria, diplopia, and other motor and sensory symptoms of brain stem ischemia Transient ischemic attack, subclavian steal, basilar artery migraine
With arm exercise Subclavian steal
Confusion after episode Seizure
10Seizure vs Syncope
- Seizure
- Aura, frothing at the mouth
- Horizontal eye deviation, tongue biting
- Elevated BP, sinus tach
- Sustained tonic clonic movements,
incontinence - Disorientation, slow recovery
11Syncope Diagnostic Tests
- History and physical examination cardiac
disease, family h/o SCD, medications, witness - Orthostatic BP check
- ECG Q waves, QTc, delta wave, epsilon wave
- Holter monitor V pause gt 3 sec while awake,
Mobitz type 2 or CHB, VT. - Arrhythmia event monitor
- Echocardiogram
- Tilt table test
- Electophysiologic testing
12Diagnostic Tests for Syncope
Test Indication Disadvantage
Holter Monitor Frequent symptoms of palpitations or dizziness Low yield if symptoms are intermittent
Continuous-Loop Recorder Intermittent or very transient symptoms patient has little warning before symptoms occur Inconvenient to use for long periods of time
Implantable Loop Recorder Infrequent episodes of syncope diagnosis cannot be made noninvasively Requires invasive procedure
Signal-Averaged ECG Syncope and structural heart disease Low positive predictive value
13Diagnostic Tests for Syncope (contd)
Test Indication Disadvantage
Upright Tilt Testing Suspected vasovagal syncope syncope without structural heart disease Inadequate reproducibility
Electrophysiologic Study Syncope when diagnosis cannot be made non-invasively syncope with structural heart disease Invasive low yield when no structural heart disease
14Syncope Indications For Hospitalization
- Presence of heart disease, dyspnea, CHF, VT,
acute coronary syndrome - ECG suggestive of arrhythmic syncope in WPW,
long QTc, Sick Sinus Syndrome, AV block, VT,
Brugada syndrome, RV dysplasia - Syncope with severe injury
- Syncope during exercise
- Family h/o sudden cardiac death
15Sinus Arrest on Holter Monitor
ACCSAP 2005
16Syncope Loop Event Recorder
ACCSAP 6, 2005
17Implantable Loop Recorder
18Implanted Loop Event Recorder
19Head Up Tilt Table Testing
20(No Transcript)
21Tilt Table Testing When to do it?
- For diagnosis
- Suspected reflex, atypical presentation
- Unexplained syncope at the end of work-up,
orthostatic trigger present - Suspected delayed orthostatic hypotension
22Neurally Mediated Syncope
- Also known as vasovagal syncope.
- Recurrent syncope in the absence of structural
heart disease is most likely neurally mediated. - Head-upright tilt test maximizes venous pooling,
sympathetic activation and circulating
catecholamines. - Most vasovagal episodes involve both
cardioinhibition (drop in heart rate) and
vasodepressor response (drop in BP).
23 Case 1
- A 20 year old female presents with recurrent
near syncope and syncope preceded by nausea,
sweating and gradual tunnel visionusually after
prolonged standing. The ECG and 2-D
echocardiogram are normal. What would be the next
step? - Answer Tilt table test.
- Q What is the mechanism for the visual
symptoms? - Answer Collapse of peripheral vessels of the
retina.
24SyncopeThe Role of Electrophysiologic Testing
- Most important diagnostic tool is the history
- High risk historical elements
- Syncope resulting in injury
- Syncope resulting in motor vehicle accident
- Syncope in the setting of structural heart
disease - Syncope preceded by palpitations
- Syncope while supine
- Abnormal ECG
- Lack of low risk elements
25Guidelines for EP Testing in Syncope
- Class I General agreement
- Patients with structural heart disease
and unexplained syncope - Class II Less certain, but accepted
- Patients with recurrent unexplained
syncope without structural heart disease and a
negative tilt test - Class III Not indicated
- Patients with known cause of syncope
in whom treatment will not be guided by EP testing
26 Electrophysiologic Testing in Syncope
- Sinus node function prolonged sinus node
recovery time - Abnormal AV conduction ?HV interval, infra His
block - Inducibility of sustained VT
- Inducibility of rapid SVT with symptoms,
hypotension
27Neurally Mediated Syncope
- Precipitating factors prolonged standing,
dehydration, alcohol, diuretics, vasodilators. - Sit/lie down at onset of symptoms, cross the legs
and tense them together if sitting. - Salt supplementation and fluids.
- Isometric arm, leg counterpressure.
- Moderate aerobic and isometric exercise.
- Tilt training.
28Therapy of Neurocardiogenic Syncope
Treatment Mechanism
Volume expansion (increase salt and fluid intake, fludrocortisone) Maintain ventricular volume
Beta-Blockers Block response to adrenergic stimulation reduce ventricular contractility prevent activation of ventricular mechanoreceptors
Anticholinergic agents (scopolamine, disopyramide) Block vagal response reduce ventricular contractility (disopyramide)
Serotonin reuptake inhibitors Prevent vasodilation and bradycardia possibly by downregulation of response to serotonin
Methylxanthines Adenosine receptor antagonist Phophodiesterase and Ca transport inhibitor (maintain vascular tone)
Midodrine Adrenergic agonist
Cardiac pacing Maintain heart rate, AV synchrony
29Pharmacologic Therapy of Neurally Mediated Syncope
- Despite the widespread use of drug therapy, none
of these pharmacologic agents have been
demonstrated to be effective in large prospective
randomized clinical trials. - A small study has reported the efficacy of
midodrine. - Metoprolol, propranolol and nadolol are no more
effective than placebo.
30Orthostatic Intolerance Syndrome
Delayed Orthostatic Intolerance
Vasovagal Syncope
Counterpressure Maneuvers
Elastic Stockings
JACC 2006 481652
JACC 2006 481425
31Syncope - Prognosis
- Highest mortality in patients with cardiac cause
- Neurally mediated syncope/ medication induced
syncope did not increase mortality - Soteriades ES, et al N
Eng J Med 347878, 2002
32Suggested Strategies for Syncope Management
33SyncopeMay be a harbinger of sudden cardiac
death
- Evaluation purpose is to determine if pt is at
increased risk for death - Identify pts with underlying heart disease
(ischemic CM, non-ischemic CM, HCM), myocardial
ischemia, WPW, genetic diseases (long-QT
syndrome, Brugada Syndrome), catecholaminergic
polymorphic VT
34Case 2
- 65 year old male with h/o inferior wall
myocardial infarction 1 year ago presents with
rapid palpitation and syncope. An ECG shows SR
and old inferior wall myocardial infarction. A 2D
echo shows LVEF 40 with inferoapical
dyskinesis. Coronary angiography reveals totally
occluded right coronary artery with collaterals.
What is the next step? - Answer Electrophysiologic study (to look for
inducible sustained VT)
35Case 3
- 72 year old male with chronic atrial
fibrillation of greater than 10 years duration
is admitted following a syncopal episode. A 2D
echo shows markedly dilated left atrium and LVEF
60. Telemetry reveals atrial fibrillation with
slow ventricular response and pauses of 5 to 7
seconds associated with near syncope. - How would you proceed?
- Answer Implant single chamber rate
responsive pacemaker
36Diagnostic Evaluation of Syncope
Syncope
Hx, physical exam, supine and upright BP, EKG
Unexplained syncope
Is there structural heart disease?
NO
YES
Electrophysiologic Study
Tilt table test