Syncope or Sudden Fainting
Syncope is a common disorder of temporary loss of consciousness
and posture, described as 'fainting' or 'passing out.' It's
usually related to temporary insufficient blood flow to the
brain and annually affects six per cent of elderly persons and
accounts for 3 per cent of emergency department visits. Syncope
is an important heart problem, is disabling, costly, may cause
grievous injury or may be the only initial sign before the
sudden cardiac death. Evaluating cause of syncope is difficult
as brain, heart or some metabolic abnormality could be
responsible for the same. The probable cause of syncope is
established in only 75 per cent of cases. The annual cost of
evaluating and treating patients with syncope in United States
alone is a staggering 800 million dollars.
The common faint or Vasovagal Syncope
Most of us remember that in our morning school assembly, a
student would fall on prolonged standing. On lying flat on the
ground he would recover promptly and such episodes were more
common during sunny days. This was actually vasovagal syncope or
the common faint. This is more common during emotional stress,
pain, after a hot shower or in warm environment. It is seen
mostly in young women and is more often than not associated with
warning symptoms such as nausea, blurred vision or
light-headedness. But there are many more forms of syncope, with
many causes, apart from the vasovagal syncope.
Tilt table testing and other tools
The gold standard test for the diagnosis of the common faint is
tilt table test. This is a simple non-invasive method for
recognition of this condition. Keeping the patient in upright
position for 30 to 45 minutes at an angle of about 70 degrees
performs this test. The test is done on a special mechanized
examination table with safety belts and footrest. Sometimes an
additional drug is given to enhance the positivity of the test.
The positivity of the test is defined as development of syncope
or slow heart rate with drop in blood pressure. The syncope
observed is usually reversible on making the table horizontal or
after giving additional drugs to the patient. The test is
generally performed in a susceptible population where recurrent
disabling syncope episodes or a single episode has occurred. But
in presence of organic heart disease the test is contraindicated.
Other investigating tools for the diagnosis of syncope include
careful history taking, holter monitoring, echocardiography,
stress testing, signal averaged ECG, event recorder and electro
physiology testing. A proper neurological examination completes
the appropriate workup for this condition.
The Treatment
The treatment depends on the cause discovered and may include
appropriate patient education, increase in salt intake,
discontinuation of an offending drug, starting a new drug,
pacemaker or AICD implantation and catheter ablation. The latter
modalities are performed in specialized centers and are
expensive. Cardiac syncope has a poorer prognosis than other
forms of syncope. The one year end pint mortality rate has been
shown to be as high as 18-33 per cent. Non-cardiac including
vasovagal syncope seems to have no effect on overall mortality
rates. Patients with syncope should be instructed not to drive
until curative treatment has been done.