Literature DB >> 16749503

[Differential behaviour of blood pressure in patients with neurocardiogenic syncope during the initial stage of the tilt table test].

Enrique Asensio Lafuente1, Eloisa Colín Ramírez, Lilia Castillo Martínez, Jorge Oseguera Moguel, René Narváez David, Joel Dorantes García, Jaime Galindo Uribe, Arturo Orea Tejeda.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Neurocardiogenic syncope (NCS) is diagnosed by means of a head-up tilt table tests (HUTT). This is a prolonged test although early outcome predictors are known.
METHODS: We conducted a study among patients engaged in a syncope study protocol. We performed HUTT in all of them and compared the basal arterial pressure with the arterial pressure at the end of a the 70 degrees tilting.
RESULTS: We performed 185 HUTT studies. Systolic blood pressure (BP) raised 0.9% among patients with a negative test, whereas patients with a positive HUTT showed a 2.3% decrease (p = 0.2) in the same measurement. Diastolic BP increased 34% among negative HUTT patients and 14.9% among patients with positive test (p = 0.02). We calculated a relative risk of 1.45 for positive test when the combination of systolic BD decrease and dyastolic increase was present, according to the percentage of change (IC95%: 1.1 to 7.8).
CONCLUSIONS: The combination of systolic BP reduction and diastolic BP elevation at the end of the 70 degrees tilting is associated with an increased risk of having a positive HUTT. These changes might be related to differential sympathetic stimulation.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16749503

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Cardiol Mex        ISSN: 1665-1731


  1 in total

1.  Feasibility of a new free mobility procedure to evaluate the function of the autonomic nervous system in patients with syncope.

Authors:  Juan Nader-Kawachi; Paulo C Manrique-Mirón; Yaima C Pino-Peña; María L Andrade-Magdaleno; Jesús López-Estrada
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-08-19       Impact factor: 4.379

  1 in total

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