| Literature DB >> 33178533 |
Abstract
Dizziness can be protean with multiple phenotypes. One common phenotype in the young population is postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS). POTS has a unique cardiovascular signature with a fascinating range of etiologies and pharmacodynamic substrates. This condition can pass undiagnosed for many years and is often mistaken as an anxiety disorder due to some of its hyperadrenergic manifestations. We present one such case and then flesh out the treatment strategies, both conservative and pharmacologic. We finally describe the various underlying pathophysiologic mechanisms of POTS and its sub-types and outline the various aberrant cardiovascular reflexes. We also describe the power spectra of the heart rate variability frequency bands and their underlying physiologic basis.Entities:
Keywords: autonomic disturbance
Year: 2020 PMID: 33178533 PMCID: PMC7652348 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.10881
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Tilt-table test results with body elevation at 70 degrees for 10 minutes, after which the study was aborted at 10 minutes secondary to intolerance
Blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR)
| supine posture | 0 minutes | 1 minute | 5 minutes | 10 minutes | |
| BP | 109/85 | 97/65 | 125/68 | 132/90 | 115/62 |
| HR | 61 | 106 | 117 | 122 | 124 |
Displaying the main pharmacologic agents used in treating the vast majority of POTS patients, with the mechanism of action and pragmatic notes
Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS)
| AGENT | CLASS OF AGENT | MECHANISM OF ACTION | NOTEWORTHY FEATURES |
| Fludrocortisone | Mineralocorticoid | Renal sodium retention with blood volume expansion and an increasing peripheral vascular resistance by sensitizing alpha-adrenergic receptors | Watch out for hypokalaemia |
| Midodrine | Vasopressor | Alfa-1 receptor agonist with venoconstriction and increasing venous return | Timing is important due to the short half-life. Watch out for supine hypertension |
| Pyridostigmine | Cholinesterase inhibitor | Increases synaptic autonomic ganglia acetylcholine thereby increasing vascular tone upon assuming erect posture. | Does not cause supine hypertension due to mechanism of action. Watch out for gastrointestinal distress |
| Propranolol | Beta 2-receptor blocker | Reduces tachycardia | Use low doses as higher doses can aggravate symptoms due to cardiac beta-2-receptor super-sensitivity |
Power spectra analysis of heart rate variability reveals three frequency bands that reflect the autonomic activity of the nervous system
Hertz (Hz)
| HIGH-FREQUENCY BAND | MID-FREQUENCY BAND | LOW-FREQUENCY BAND | |
| FREQUENCY RANGE (Hz), not exact | 0.2 - 0.4 | 0.04 - 0.15 (mean = 0.1) | 0.02 - 0.07 |
| PERIOD (seconds), not exact | 2.5 - 7 | 7 - 25 | 25 - 300 |
| ORIGIN | Parasympathetic - Respiratory | Parasympathetic - Sigh - Deep breath | Sympathetic activity / Cardiac sympathetic activity |
| PHYSIOLOGIC CORRELATE | Respiratory sinus arrhythmia | Baroreceptor activity | Thermoregulation / Renin-angiotensin system / Circadian rhythm |
| ONSET LATENCY(seconds) | Instantaneous | Instantaneous | Five-second delay; may reach steady state in 27 seconds |
| ABERRATION / PATHOLOGY | Cardiac disease / Aging / Anxiety disorders | Arrhythmic death / PTSD |
Figure 1Shift in power spectra of low- and high-frequency bands from the supine to erect posture with head-up tilt
Note the rise in LF peak and the fall in HF peak upon the assumption of erect posture.
Power spectral density (PSD), millisecond (msec), Hertz (Hz), low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF)