Syncope
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Clinic
- Syncope, commonly known as fainting, or passing out
- Due to its etiology, syncope has three forms
- Orthostatic syncope
- Reflex syncope (Vasovagal Syncope)
Orthostatic syncope
- It refers to syncope resulting from a postural decrease in blood pressure.
- It occurs when there is a persistent reduction in blood pressure of at least 20mmHg systolic or 10mmHg diastolic within 3 minutes of standing or being upright to 60 degrees on the head-up tilt table.
- In people with initial orthostatic hypotension, the decrease in blood pressure occurs within 15 seconds, while in those with delayed orthostatic hypotension it occurs after over 3 minutes of assuming an upright position.
Reflex syncope
- Reflex syncope is a brief loss of consciousness due to a neurologically induced drop in blood pressure and/or a decrease in heart rate.
- It is divided into three types:
- Vasovagal which is typically triggered by seeing blood, pain, emotional stress, or prolonged standing.
- Situational which is often triggered by urination, swallowing, or coughing.
- Carotid sinus which is due to pressure on the carotid sinus in the neck.
Sign / Symptom
- Loss of consciousness
- Light-headedness, Nausea
- Feeling of hot / cold + sweating
- Ringing in the ears
- Uncomfortable feeling in heart
- Confusion: Slight inability to speak or form words
- Visual disturbances such as lights seeming too bright, fuzzy or tunnel vision, black cloud-like spots in vision
- Nervousness
Mechanism
Orthostatic syncope | Reflex syncope |
---|---|
|
|
Dynamic vs Static SSPs
- Syncope has a lot of Symptoms, but most of them are post-nodes.
- It means that Confusion, Dizziness, Blurred vision, Fatigue, Coma and Ext coldness are all caused by Hypotention.
- In another word they are not caused by the miasm dependently, but they are the direct effect of hypotention.
- So I delete all of them. I suggest only Orthostatic Hypotention as fixed SSP and Bradycardia as changeable SSP.
- Also I suggest the rubric
Entity / Miasm
- I can only suggest one rubric, which is G/ Hypotention/ Orthostatic and have 7 miasms: SAHF, HSV-1, CMV, HIV, HTLV-1, LBB, TBE
Related diseases
- Addison's disease
- Atherosclerosis
- Diabetes
- Pheochromocytoma
- Porphyria
- Autoimmune autonomic ganglionopathy
- Multiple system atrophy
- Ehlers–Danlos syndrome
- Anorexia nervosa, Bulimia nervosa
- Parkinson's disease
- Lewy body dementias
Note
Cardiogenic Neurological and syncopes usually come together but there is some guides to be differentiated from each other
- Hypotention of Cardiogenic origin occurred in 2-3 min, but in Neurologic one, Hypotention occurred immediately.
- Cardiogenic syncope is accompanied by valvular heart diseases, myocardial diseases, and cardiac arrhythmia, while neurologic syncope has neurologic causes.
- Neurologic Syncope is more often in elderly people. [1] [2]
- ↑ Chen-Scarabelli C, Scarabelli TM. Neurocardiogenic syncope. BMJ. 2004 Aug 7;329(7461):336-41. doi: 10.1136/bmj.329.7461.336. PMID: 15297344; PMCID: PMC506859.
- ↑ Nwazue VC, Raj SR. Confounders of vasovagal syncope: orthostatic hypotension. Cardiol Clin. 2013 Feb;31(1):89-100. doi: 10.1016/j.ccl.2012.09.003. PMID: 23217690; PMCID: PMC3589989.