Serious outcomes among emergency department patients with presyncope: A systematic review

Author:

Mirfazaelian Hadi12,Stiell Ian345,Masoomi Rasoul6ORCID,Garjani Khazar1,Thiruganasambandamoorthy Venkatesh345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Emergency Medicine Department Tehran University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

2. Prehospital and Hospital Emergency Research Center Tehran University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

3. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

4. School of Epidemiology and Public Health University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

5. Acure Care Research Program The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

6. Independent Researcher Tehran Iran

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSyncope is transient loss of consciousness, and in presyncope, patients experience same prodromal symptoms without losing consciousness. While studies have extensively reported the risk of serious outcome among emergency department (ED) syncope, the outcome for patients with presyncope and their management are not well studied. We undertook a systematic review to assess the occurrence/identification of short‐term (30‐day) serious outcomes among ED patients with presyncope.MethodsED studies that enrolled patients with presyncope and reported any short‐term serious outcome were included. Studies that enrolled patients without presyncope (e.g., hypoglycemia, seizure, and stroke) were excluded. We restricted our study to only English publications and searched the MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science from the inception date to July 2023. We used SIGN 50 tool for assessment of risk of bias.ResultsIn total, 1788 articles were screened by two reviewers and 32 articles were selected for full‐text assessment. Five (four prospective and one retrospective) studies with 2741 presyncope patients were included. Four studies were from North America and the fifth one was from Europe. Included studies had weaknesses due to risk of bias, but all had acceptable quality. The prevalence of overall adverse outcome varied 4.4%–26.8% for all adults and 5.5%–18.7% among older patients; arrhythmia was the most prevalent (17.4% in one study), followed by anemia/hemorrhage as reported in different studies. Among older patients, myocardial infarction was the third most common serious outcome reported in one study.ConclusionsThe prevalence of short‐term serious outcomes varies from 4% to 27% among ED patients with presyncope in our review, with arrhythmia being the most common serious outcome. Our review indicates that presyncope may carry a similar risk to syncope, and hence, the same level of caution should be exercised for ED presyncope management as syncope.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference29 articles.

1. 2017 ACC/AHA/HRS guideline for the evaluation and management of patients with syncope: executive summary: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Heart Rhythm Society;Shen WK;J Am Coll Cardiol,2017

2. National trends in resource utilization associated with ED visits for syncope;Probst MA;Am J Emerg Med,2015

3. Derivation of the San Francisco syncope rule to predict patients with short‐term serious outcomes;Quinn JV;Ann Emerg Med,2004

4. Characteristics and admission patterns of patients presenting with syncope to US emergency departments, 1992–2000;Sun BC;Acad Emerg Med,2004

5. Long‐term outcomes in syncope patients presenting to the emergency department: a systematic review;Leafloor CW;Can J Emerg Med,2020

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