Abstract
Syncope is a common medical problem, which accounts for 3.5% of emergency room visits. It includes diverse clinical etiologies, from cardiac origin with poor prognosis to reflex-mediated hypotension with benign clinical course. Trauma is not rare in patients with syncope, e.g. bruises or lacerations on the head and face were recognized in 17%. Accordingly, patients presenting with syncope may have a risk of sudden cardiac death, or risk of trauma if the episodes are repetitive. It is a physician's task to diagnose syncope and identify its cause. The history is an essential part of the initial evaluation. Electrocardiography (ECG) is necessary in every case. However, organic disease as a cause is identified in 20% of syncope in routine work-up, and the remaining cases are reflex induced hypotension (neurocardiogenic syncope), misdiagnosed arrhythmia, coronary spasm or unknown. Recent investigations suggest the usefulness of provocation to diagnose neurocardiogenic syncope. Two important non-invasive provocations to reproduce syncope are carotid sinus compression and tilt table test. In patients with syncope who visited emergency room, tilt test was positive in 25%, whereas the response to carotid sinus compression was positive in 21%. One or both of the tests was positive in 39%, suggesting that neurally-mediated syncope accounts for a significant number of patients. © 1994, The Keio Journal of Medicine. All rights reserved.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Hori, S. (1994). Diagnosis of Patients with Syncope in Emergency Medicine. The Keio Journal of Medicine, 43(4), 185–191. https://doi.org/10.2302/kjm.43.185
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.