Objective: According to the guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology, a presumed diagnosis of neurally mediated syncope (NMS) can be made when patients have a consistent history and competing diagnoses are excluded. In the present study, we compared the initial diagnosis of NMS by means of implantable loop recorder (ILR) documentation.
Methods: In this prospective multicentre observational study which involved 51 hospitals in nine countries in Europe and Canada, 504 NMS patients ≥40 years, who had suffered ≥3 syncopal episodes in the previous 2 years received an ILR and were followed up for a mean of 15±11 months.
Results: ILR recorded a spontaneous syncope in 187 cases, with an estimated diagnostic yield of 47% at 3 years. ILR findings were consistent with the initial diagnosis of presumed NMS in 162 (87%) patients whereas did not confirm NMS in another 25 (13%), who had an intrinsic cardiac arrhythmic cause (atrial tachyarrhythmias (#6), long pause on termination of tachyarrhythmia (#8), persistent bradycardia (#3), ventricular tachycardia (#4)) or a non-arrhythmic loss of consciousness (non-syncopal (#3), orthostatic hypotension (#1)). No clinical baseline feature was able to predict an intrinsic cardiac cause with the exception of more frequent non-syncopal atrial tachyarrhythmias on clinical history, which were present in 38% of cardiac versus 5% of NMS patients (p=0.001). Tilt table testing (TT) was positive in 76/136 (56%) presumed NMS and in 9/21 (43%) non-NMS patients (p=0.35); an asystolic response was present in 28/136 (21%) NMS and in 0/21 (0%) non-NMS patients (p=0.03).
Conclusions: ILR findings showed results other than NMS in a small, although non-negligible, number of patients older than 40 years. TT was unable to discriminate between presumed NMS and non-NMS with the exception of an asystolic response which was highly specific.
Keywords: AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM.