Copyright
©The Author(s) 2023.
World J Cardiol. Apr 26, 2023; 15(4): 119-141
Published online Apr 26, 2023. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v15.i4.119
Published online Apr 26, 2023. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v15.i4.119
Table 1 Main cardiac causes of syncope
| Cardiac syncope | |||
| Arrhythmic causes | Bradyarrhythmia | Sick sinus syndrome/sinus node disfunction | |
| Atrioventricular block | |||
| Tachyarrhythmia | Supraventricular tachycardia (AVNRT, AVRT, AT, fast AF, etc.) | ||
| Ventricular arrhythmias | Related to structural heart disease | ||
| Channelopathies and inherited arrhythmia syndromes | |||
| Non-arrhythmic causes | Mechanical causes | Valvulopathies (aortic stenosis, mitral stenosis, etc.) | |
| HCM | |||
| Atrial myxoma | |||
| Pulmonary emboli | |||
| Tamponade | |||
| Severe pulmonary hypertension | |||
| Acute coronary syndrome |
Table 2 Main advantages, limitations, and indications of the most commonly used devices for electrocardiogram cardiac monitoring in patients with syncope
| Advantages | Disadvantages | Main indications | |
| 24-hr holter | Continuous recording: 12 leads with good correlation with surface ECG; low economic cost per study | Discomfort for the patient; artifacts; maximum recording of 24-48 h (low diagnostic yield); high economic cost per diagnosis | Very frequent (daily) symptoms; in-hospital monitoring (if ECG-telemetry not available) |
| Skin patches | Continuous recording of 7-14 d; good tolerability for patients | Single-use and greater economic cost; only one | Frequent (weekly) symptoms |
| External loop recorders | Loop recording (includes beginning and end of arrhythmic event); monitoring for 4 wk; low economic cost per study | Patient discomfort; requires education from healthcare professional on how to correctly place the electrodes; relatively low diagnostic yield | Frequent (weekly-monthly) symptoms |
| Implantable loop recorders | Loop recording; up to 3-yr monitoring (good diagnostic yield); patient does not have to do anything; remote monitoring | Invasiveness and associated complications (infection, bleeding, etc.); individual economic cost; single lead | Infrequent symptoms; most useful in syncope |
Table 3 High-risk features suggesting cardiac syncope
| High-risk features |
| Past medical history |
| Previous myocardial infarction |
| Previous cardiovascular condition (i.e., BrS, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, Long QT syndrome, etc.) |
| Syncopal event |
| Syncope during exertion or in supine position |
| Syncope associated with chest pain, palpitations, breathless, or abdominal pain |
| Physical examination |
| Signs of heart failure |
| Cardiac murmur suggesting specific condition (i.e., aortic stenosis) |
| Signs of shock |
| Electrocardiogram |
| Conduction disturbance (AV block, bundle branch block) |
| Pathological Q waves |
| Long QT interval |
| Pre-excitation syndrome |
| Negative T waves |
- Citation: Francisco Pascual J, Jordan Marchite P, Rodríguez Silva J, Rivas Gándara N. Arrhythmic syncope: From diagnosis to management. World J Cardiol 2023; 15(4): 119-141
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8462/full/v15/i4/119.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4330/wjc.v15.i4.119
