Cardioinhibitory syncope with asystole during nitroglycerin potentiated head up tilt test: prevalence and clinical predictors.

Autor: Russo, Vincenzo, Parente, Erika, Rago, Anna, Comune, Angelo, Laezza, Nunzia, Papa, Andrea Antonio, Chamberland, Celeste, Huynh, Thao, Golino, Paolo, Brignole, Michele, Nigro, Gerardo
Předmět:
Zdroj: Clinical Autonomic Research; Jun2022, Vol. 32 Issue 3, p167-173, 7p
Abstrakt: Aims: The aim of our study was to evaluate the prevalence and clinical predictors of cardioinhibitory (CI) responses with asystole at the nitroglycerin (NTG)-potentiated head-up tilt test (HUTT) in patients with a history of syncope admitted to a tertiary referral syncope unit. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated all consecutive patients who underwent NTG-potentiated HUTT for suspected reflex syncope at our institution from March 1 2017 to May 1 2020. The prevalence of HUTT-induced CI syncope was assessed. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to test the association of asystolic response to HUTT with a set of clinical covariates. Results: We enrolled 1285 patients (45 ± 19.1 years; 49.6% male); 368 (28.6%) showed HUTT-induced CI response with asystole. A multivariate analysis revealed that the following factors were independently associated with HUTT-induced CI syncope: male sex (OR 1.48; ConInt 1.14–1.92; P = 0.003), smoking (OR 2.22; ConInt 1.56–3.115; P < 0.001), traumatic syncope (OR: 2.81; ConInt 1.79–4.42; P < 0.001), situational syncope (OR 0.45; ConInt 0.27–0.73; P = 0.002), and the use of diuretics (OR 9.94; ConInt 3.83–25.76; P < 0.001). Conclusions: The cardioinhibitory syncope with asystole induced by NTG-potentiated HUTT is more frequent than previously reported. The male gender, smoking habit, history of traumatic syncope, and use of diuretics were independent predictors of HUTT-induced CI responses. Conversely, the history of situational syncope seems to reduce this probability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index