Affiliation:
1. From the Division of Cardiology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada, and Medtronic, Minneapolis, Minn (T.T.-N.).
Abstract
Background
—The conventional investigation of patients who present with syncope involves short-term ECG monitoring or provocative testing with head-up tilt and electrophysiological testing. A symptom-rhythm correlation is often difficult to obtain during spontaneous syncope because of its sporadic, infrequent, and unpredictable nature.
Methods and Results
—We used a prolonged monitoring strategy to determine the cause of syncope in 85 patients (age, 59±18 years; 44 men) with recurrent undiagnosed syncope with an implantable loop recorder capable of cardiac monitoring for up to 18 months. During a mean of 10.5±4.0 months of follow-up, symptoms recurred in 58 patients (68%) 71±79 days (2.3±2.6 months) after implantable loop recorder insertion. An arrhythmia was detected in 42% of patients who recorded a rhythm during recurrent symptoms, with bradycardia present in 18 and tachycardia in 3. Five of the 18 bradycardic patients and 2 additional sinus rhythm patients received a clinical diagnosis of neurally mediated syncope. Patients who experienced presyncope were much less likely to record an arrhythmia during symptoms compared with recurrence of syncope (24% versus 70%,
P
=0.0005). There were no adverse events associated with recurrent symptoms, and there were no sudden deaths. Inability to freeze after an event occurred in 8 patients, and pocket infection occurred in 3.
Conclusions
—The strategy of prolonged monitoring is effective and safe in patients with problematic syncope.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
309 articles.
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