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[Evaluation of the effects of diverse therapeutic treatments versus no treatment of patients with neurocardiogenic syncope].
Cardiologia. 1998 Aug; 43(8):833-7.C

Abstract

Head-up tilt test was introduced in clinical practice to assess vasovagal syncope and its use has further been extended to evaluate the efficacy of drug administration in these patients. Nevertheless, the effects of tilt test on vasovagal syncope have never been compared with those obtained by ethylephrine or propranolol administration. One hundred and sixty-nine consecutive patients with vasovagal syncope and positive baseline or nitrate-potentiated tilt test (60 degrees upright position for 45 min, or until syncope occurred; 5 mg sublingual isosorbide dinitrate administration if no symptoms occurred) were randomly distributed among three groups: Group A (57 control patients discharged without medical therapy); Group B (56 patients discharged with 75 mg/die ethylephrine); Group C (56 patients discharged with 80 mg/die propranolol). Tilt test was repeated after 1 month, while clinical outcome was evaluated monthly for a mean follow-up of 37.1 +/- 15.6 months. No significant differences in acute tilt-induced syncope recurrence rates were obtained among groups at test repetition since 70.2% of Group A, 69.6% of Group B and 62.5% of Group C experienced syncope. At 3-year follow-up 82.4% of Group A, 83.9% of Group B and 87.5% of Group C (NS among groups) remained symptom free, the most important clinical result being obtained in untreated patients. These data suggest that tilt test execution may prevent syncope recurrence as ethylephrine or propranolol administration. Irrespective of the therapeutical choice, the "controlled reproduction" of symptoms and some psychophysical training of patients to avoid precipitating circumstances, to recognize early symptoms promptly to be reverted by Trendelemburg position, may produce the same clinical improvement as (empiric) ethylephrine or propranolol therapy.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Dipartimento di Cardiologia Medica e Chirurgica, Università degli Studi G D'Annunzio, Chieti.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Clinical Trial
Comparative Study
English Abstract
Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial

Language

ita

PubMed ID

9808874

Citation

Di Girolamo, E, et al. "[Evaluation of the Effects of Diverse Therapeutic Treatments Versus No Treatment of Patients With Neurocardiogenic Syncope]." Cardiologia (Rome, Italy), vol. 43, no. 8, 1998, pp. 833-7.
Di Girolamo E, Di Iorio C, Sabatini P, et al. [Evaluation of the effects of diverse therapeutic treatments versus no treatment of patients with neurocardiogenic syncope]. Cardiologia. 1998;43(8):833-7.
Di Girolamo, E., Di Iorio, C., Sabatini, P., Leonzio, L., & Barsotti, A. (1998). [Evaluation of the effects of diverse therapeutic treatments versus no treatment of patients with neurocardiogenic syncope]. Cardiologia (Rome, Italy), 43(8), 833-7.
Di Girolamo E, et al. [Evaluation of the Effects of Diverse Therapeutic Treatments Versus No Treatment of Patients With Neurocardiogenic Syncope]. Cardiologia. 1998;43(8):833-7. PubMed PMID: 9808874.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - [Evaluation of the effects of diverse therapeutic treatments versus no treatment of patients with neurocardiogenic syncope]. AU - Di Girolamo,E, AU - Di Iorio,C, AU - Sabatini,P, AU - Leonzio,L, AU - Barsotti,A, PY - 1998/11/11/pubmed PY - 1998/11/11/medline PY - 1998/11/11/entrez SP - 833 EP - 7 JF - Cardiologia (Rome, Italy) JO - Cardiologia VL - 43 IS - 8 N2 - Head-up tilt test was introduced in clinical practice to assess vasovagal syncope and its use has further been extended to evaluate the efficacy of drug administration in these patients. Nevertheless, the effects of tilt test on vasovagal syncope have never been compared with those obtained by ethylephrine or propranolol administration. One hundred and sixty-nine consecutive patients with vasovagal syncope and positive baseline or nitrate-potentiated tilt test (60 degrees upright position for 45 min, or until syncope occurred; 5 mg sublingual isosorbide dinitrate administration if no symptoms occurred) were randomly distributed among three groups: Group A (57 control patients discharged without medical therapy); Group B (56 patients discharged with 75 mg/die ethylephrine); Group C (56 patients discharged with 80 mg/die propranolol). Tilt test was repeated after 1 month, while clinical outcome was evaluated monthly for a mean follow-up of 37.1 +/- 15.6 months. No significant differences in acute tilt-induced syncope recurrence rates were obtained among groups at test repetition since 70.2% of Group A, 69.6% of Group B and 62.5% of Group C experienced syncope. At 3-year follow-up 82.4% of Group A, 83.9% of Group B and 87.5% of Group C (NS among groups) remained symptom free, the most important clinical result being obtained in untreated patients. These data suggest that tilt test execution may prevent syncope recurrence as ethylephrine or propranolol administration. Irrespective of the therapeutical choice, the "controlled reproduction" of symptoms and some psychophysical training of patients to avoid precipitating circumstances, to recognize early symptoms promptly to be reverted by Trendelemburg position, may produce the same clinical improvement as (empiric) ethylephrine or propranolol therapy. SN - 0393-1978 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/9808874/[Evaluation_of_the_effects_of_diverse_therapeutic_treatments_versus_no_treatment_of_patients_with_neurocardiogenic_syncope]_ L2 - https://antibodies.cancer.gov/detail/CPTC-KRAS4B-1 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -