Artigo Revisado por pares

Do the Recently Modified Pacemaker Guidelines for Neurocardiogenic Syncope Also Apply to Young Patients?

2004; Karger Publishers; Volume: 102; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1159/000081011

ISSN

1421-9751

Autores

Alan B. Wagshal, Jean Marc Weinstein, Orly Weinstein, Vladimir Zeldetz, Esther Damri, Reuven Ilia, Amos Katz,

Tópico(s)

Cardiac Arrhythmias and Treatments

Resumo

To assess the classification of neurocardiogenic syncope (NCS) as a IIA indication for pacemaker implantation in the recent American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines/North American Society for Pacing and Electrophysiology guidelines, we performed chart reviews and follow-up interviews in a cohort of 45 consecutive young Israeli soldiers (age 18-24 years) with a history of syncope (mean of 9 prior syncopal episodes) and a positive tilt test treated with drug therapy. Asystole longer than 5 s during tilt testing occurred in 11 patients. Five years later, we found that only 2 patients were still taking medications, only 1 patient (2%) still reported frequent syncopal or near-syncopal episodes and 3 patients (7%) had rare symptoms (no more than one syncopal episode during the past 2 years), while the remaining 40 (89%) were symptom free off medications. Thus, NCS in young patients, even with prolonged asystole during tilt testing, a history of frequent syncopal episodes and other high- risk factors described in the guidelines, is often a self-limiting disorder, perhaps stress related or situational in nature; an overwhelming number of patients become asymptomatic and stop taking medications within 1-2 years. These patients do not require long-term therapy; thus, our data would suggest that the IIA pacing indication for NCS should be restricted to older patients.

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