Background: Syncope and sudden death in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may have a hemodynamic basis. The presence of a small ventricular cavity with high intracavity pressures may activate left ventricular baroreceptors and cause reflex hypotension as described in other populations with syncope.
Methods and results: To investigate this potential mechanism of syncope in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, we studied 17 patients with a history of syncope (syncopal), 19 without syncope (nonsyncopal), and nine normal control subjects by using a head-up tilt test. Head-up tilt at 60 degrees for 45 minutes was followed by 10-minute tilts during incremental doses of isoprenaline. Heart rate, blood pressure, and two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography were monitored throughout. On tilting, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients showed a decline in mean arterial pressure of -5 +/- 6 mm Hg (p less than 0.001) compared with no change in control subjects (0.2 +/- 6 mm Hg, p = 0.9). Left ventricular outflow tract velocity decreased on tilting in control subjects (-8 +/- 6 cm/sec, p = 0.004) but increased in the syncopal and nonsyncopal patients (20 +/- 50 cm/sec, p = 0.05). Reflex hypotension with or without bradycardia, associated with syncope or presyncope, was induced in seven syncopal patients, two nonsyncopal patients, and two control subjects (p = 0.05). The early response to tilt in these subjects was characterized by maintenance of blood pressure but a greater increase in left ventricular fractional shortening than in the other subjects (10 +/- 8% versus 1 +/- 1%, p = 0.002). The onset of hypotension was associated with a trend toward further decreases in left ventricular diameters, outflow tract velocity, and transmitral flow velocities. In the remaining patients who had a negative test, transient hypotension (systolic pressure less than 100 mm Hg) occurred in seven syncopal patients and three nonsyncopal patients compared with none of the control subjects (p = 0.01). In total, hypotension was demonstrated in 82% of syncopal patients compared with 26% of nonsyncopal patients and 22% of control subjects (p = 0.001).
Conclusions: Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and a history of syncope frequently display hypotension during head-up tilt. In some cases, sudden hypotension occurs and is usually associated with bradycardia and a reduced cavity size, findings compatible with activation of a ventricular baroreflex. In other cases, transient hypotension occurs and could be explained by an impairment of baroreceptor function. These mechanisms may contribute to the occurrence of syncope in daily life.