Article
Cerebral blood flow during vasovagal syncope induced by active
standing or head up tilt
R Y T Sung, Z D Du, C W Yu, M C Yam, T F Fok
Department of
Paediatrics, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, Hong Kong, The People's
Republic of China
Correspondence to: Dr Sung email: yntzsung{at}cuhk.edu.hk
Accepted 23
September 1999
BACKGROUND
Vasovagal
syncope is usually associated with a sudden drop of blood pressure
and/or heart rate. However, occasionally the symptoms of syncope
induced by orthostatic stress testing are not associated with obvious
haemodynamic changes. The mechanisms of syncope in these patients are
not clear.
AIM
To
evaluate changes in cerebral blood flow velocities during orthostatic
stress testing in children and adolescents with vasovagal syncope.
METHODS
Electrocardiogram,
instantaneous arterial blood pressure, and right middle cerebral artery
blood flow velocity were recorded at rest, during active standing, and
80° head up tilt. 32 children and adolescents aged between 7 and 18 years with a history of repeated vasovagal syncope and 23 healthy
control subjects were studied.
RESULTS
Presyncope
occurred in 10 patients during standing, and 13 patients during head up
tilt. None of the controls had symptoms during the test. The
transcranial Doppler study showed that the symptoms were associated
with significant decreases of diastolic cerebral blood flow velocity
and an increase of pulsatility. There was no significant change of the
systolic cerebral blood flow velocity. The changes of cerebral blood
flow velocities occurred in all episodes of presyncope, including those
not associated with severe drop of blood pressure or heart rate.
CONCLUSIONS
Diastolic
cerebral blood flow velocity decreased significantly during episodes of
presyncope induced by orthostatic stress. Impairment of
autoregulation of cerebral blood flow might play an important role
in the pathophysiology of syncope.
Keywords: autoregulation; cerebral blood flow; syncope; transcranial Doppler
© 2000 by Archives of Disease in Childhood
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