Improved Patient Outcomes by Normalizing Sympathovagal Balance: Differentiating Syncope—Precise Subtype Differentiation Leads to Improved Outcomes

Author:

DePace Nicholas L.1ORCID,Bateman Julie A.1,Yayac Michael1,Oh John1,Siddique Mushfiqur1,Acosta Cesar1,Pinales Jeysel M.1,Vinik Aaron I.2ORCID,Bloom Heather L.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Medicine, Hahnemann Hospital, Drexel University College of Medicine, 438 Ganttown Rd., Ste. B8-B9, Sewell, NJ 08080, USA

2. Department of Medicine, Pathology, and Neurobiology, Research and Neuroendocrine Unit, The Strelitz Diabetes Center, Eastern Virginia Medical School, 855 W. Brambleton Ave., Rm. 2018, Norfolk, VA 23510, USA

3. Department of Cardiac Electrophysiology and Medicine, Atlanta VAMC, Emory University School of Medicine, 1670 Clairmont Rd., Decatur, GA 30033, USA

Abstract

Syncope is difficult to definitively diagnose, even with tilt-table testing and beat-to-beat blood pressure measurements, the gold-standard. Both are qualitative, subjective assessments. There are subtypes of syncope associated with autonomic conditions for which tilt-table testing is not useful. Heart rate variability analyses also include too much ambiguity. Three subtypes of syncope are differentiated: vasovagal syncope (VVS) due to parasympathetic excess (VVS-PE), VVS with abnormal heart rate response (VVS-HR), and VVS without PE (VVS-PN). P&S monitoring (ANSAR, Inc., Philadelphia, PA) differentiates subtypes in 2727 cardiology patients (50.5% female; average age: 57 years; age range: 12–100 years), serially tested over four years (3.3 tests per patient, average). P&S monitoring noninvasively, independently, and simultaneously measures parasympathetic and sympathetic (P&S) activity, including the normal P-decrease followed by an S-increase with head-up postural change (standing). Syncope, as an S-excess (SE) with stand, is differentiated from orthostatic dysfunction (e.g., POTS) as S-withdrawal with stand. Upon standing, VVS-PE is further differentiated as SE with PE, VVS-HR as SE with abnormal HR, and VVS-PN as SE with normal P- and HR-responses. Improved understanding of the underlying pathophysiology by more accurate subtyping leads to more precise therapy and improved outcomes.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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