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Paroxysmal Ventricular Standstill: A Rare Cardiac Manifestation of Syncope.
Am J Case Rep. 2020 Jun 17; 21:e924381.AJ

Abstract

BACKGROUND Transient abrupt loss of consciousness due to sudden but pronounced decrease in cardiac output caused by a change in heart rate and rhythm is termed Stokes-Adams disease. Causes of Stokes-Adams syndrome are 1) transition from normal rhythm to high grade block, 2) slowing of idioventricular rhythm in the course of complete heart block, and 3) abnormal ventricular rhythm such as ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation. Paroxysmal ventricular standstill is one of the rarest causes of Stokes-Adams attack. It is well documented that some patients with a diagnosis of epilepsy actually have a cardiac cause for their convulsions. Brevity of these episodes sometimes makes diagnosis difficult. CASE REPORT We present a case of 40-year-old builder who was normally fit and healthy who developed paroxysmal ventricular standstill. He presented to the Emergency Department with multiple episodes of seizure-like activity. Blood tests which included antibody screen were normal except for hypophosphatemia. Computed tomography head scan was normal. He was commenced on intravenous phenytoin infusion which did not abort his seizure-like episodes. Eventually, ventricular standstill was recorded on cardiac monitoring. The seizure-like episodes were determined to be Stokes-Adams attacks. He underwent transcutaneous pacing and then transvenous pacing with eventual permanent pacemaker insertion. He did not have further episodes at yearly follow-up. CONCLUSIONS This case serves as a reminder of the diagnostic dilemma between syncope and seizures. Misdiagnosing cardiac dysrhythmia for epilepsy could lead to adverse consequences for the patient. It is incumbent upon the emergency physician to perform cardiac monitoring on all patients who present with syncope or convulsion in order that dysrhythmia is observed during such episode.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Emergency Department, Charing Cross Hospital, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom.

Pub Type(s)

Case Reports
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

32598337

Citation

Adegoke, Daniel Adewale. "Paroxysmal Ventricular Standstill: a Rare Cardiac Manifestation of Syncope." The American Journal of Case Reports, vol. 21, 2020, pp. e924381.
Adegoke DA. Paroxysmal Ventricular Standstill: A Rare Cardiac Manifestation of Syncope. Am J Case Rep. 2020;21:e924381.
Adegoke, D. A. (2020). Paroxysmal Ventricular Standstill: A Rare Cardiac Manifestation of Syncope. The American Journal of Case Reports, 21, e924381. https://doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.924381
Adegoke DA. Paroxysmal Ventricular Standstill: a Rare Cardiac Manifestation of Syncope. Am J Case Rep. 2020 Jun 17;21:e924381. PubMed PMID: 32598337.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Paroxysmal Ventricular Standstill: A Rare Cardiac Manifestation of Syncope. A1 - Adegoke,Daniel Adewale, Y1 - 2020/06/17/ PY - 2020/6/30/entrez PY - 2020/7/1/pubmed PY - 2021/2/23/medline SP - e924381 EP - e924381 JF - The American journal of case reports JO - Am J Case Rep VL - 21 N2 - BACKGROUND Transient abrupt loss of consciousness due to sudden but pronounced decrease in cardiac output caused by a change in heart rate and rhythm is termed Stokes-Adams disease. Causes of Stokes-Adams syndrome are 1) transition from normal rhythm to high grade block, 2) slowing of idioventricular rhythm in the course of complete heart block, and 3) abnormal ventricular rhythm such as ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation. Paroxysmal ventricular standstill is one of the rarest causes of Stokes-Adams attack. It is well documented that some patients with a diagnosis of epilepsy actually have a cardiac cause for their convulsions. Brevity of these episodes sometimes makes diagnosis difficult. CASE REPORT We present a case of 40-year-old builder who was normally fit and healthy who developed paroxysmal ventricular standstill. He presented to the Emergency Department with multiple episodes of seizure-like activity. Blood tests which included antibody screen were normal except for hypophosphatemia. Computed tomography head scan was normal. He was commenced on intravenous phenytoin infusion which did not abort his seizure-like episodes. Eventually, ventricular standstill was recorded on cardiac monitoring. The seizure-like episodes were determined to be Stokes-Adams attacks. He underwent transcutaneous pacing and then transvenous pacing with eventual permanent pacemaker insertion. He did not have further episodes at yearly follow-up. CONCLUSIONS This case serves as a reminder of the diagnostic dilemma between syncope and seizures. Misdiagnosing cardiac dysrhythmia for epilepsy could lead to adverse consequences for the patient. It is incumbent upon the emergency physician to perform cardiac monitoring on all patients who present with syncope or convulsion in order that dysrhythmia is observed during such episode. SN - 1941-5923 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/32598337/Paroxysmal_Ventricular_Standstill:_A_Rare_Cardiac_Manifestation_of_Syncope_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -