DEVELOPMENT SITE ONLY
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
Definition
- Transient self-limiting loss of consciousness
- Usually of rapid onset with spontaneous, complete and prompt recovery
- Underlying pathology is global hypoperfusion
- May be preceded by a feeling of faintness, light-headedness or muscular weakness (presyncope)
- evaluate presyncope in the same way as true syncope
Aim of assessment
- Majority of patients will have made a full recovery at point of assessment
- Low risk of serious adverse outcomes
- Aim to identify the small proportion with a significant underlying cause at risk of serious outcome
Principal causes
Reflex (neurally mediated) syncope
- Vasovagal (simple faint)
- suggested by the 3 P's (provocation, prodromal and positional elements)
- Situational
- micturition, cough, defecation, pain, swallowing
- Carotid sinus syndrome
Syncope from orthostatic hypotension
- After 3 min standing, a drop of >20 mmHg in systolic BP or 10 mmHg in diastolic BP or systolic BP to 90 mmHg
- autonomic failure
- drug-induced
- volume depletion (e.g. haemorrhage, diarrhoea, vomiting)
Cardiac syncope
- Arrhythmias
- bradycardia, tachycardia, implanted device failure
- Structural cardiac or cardiopulmonary disease
- e.g. valvular heart disease, LV systolic dysfunction, LV outflow obstruction, cardiac tamponade, pulmonary embolism
- Syncope during (rather than after) exercise
Differential diagnosis
Disorders with impairment or loss of consciousness
- Epilepsy
- Metabolic
- hypoglycaemia, hypoxia, hyperventilation with hypocarbia
- Intoxication
- TIAs of vertebrobasilar origin. See Transient ischaemic attack guideline
Disorders resembling syncope without loss of consciousness
- Falls. See Management of falls in A&E and wards guideline
- Cataplexy
- Functional: pseudosyncope, somatisation disorders
- TIAs of carotid origin. See Transient ischaemic attack guideline
History
Circumstances
- Before episode
- position, activity, predisposing factors or precipitating events
- Symptoms at onset of episode
- nausea, aura, visual, feeling warm/hot, cardiac symptoms
- Details of episode (eye-witness account, collateral history from paramedics)
- skin colour, duration of loss of consciousness, breathing pattern, movements, tongue biting, etc
- End of episode
- confusion, muscle aches, skin colour, injury, incontinence
- Brief non-specific symptoms/signs are common in syncope
- e.g. nausea, diaphoresis and brief myoclonic jerking
- Syncope may present as true seizure
- owing to cerebral hypoperfusion
Risk factors
- Previous presyncopal or syncopal episodes
- Previous cardiac and medical history
- Family history
- sudden cardiac death, epilepsy
- Medication
- Occupation and driving status
Physical examination
- Clinical assessment to identify serious underlying conditions
- e.g. abdominal aortic aneurysm, gastrointestinal bleed
- Vital signs at rest
- Evidence of orthostatic hypotension
- lying and standing BP
- Evidence of injury
MANAGEMENT IN A&E
Screening investigations
- 12-lead ECG
- If patient has an implanted cardiac monitor in situ, request interrogation of the device before discharge
- Blood tests useful only if clinically indicated
- e.g. haemoglobin for suspected haemorrhage
- Blood glucose
- Pregnancy test in women of childbearing age
- consider ectopic pregnancy
Red flag signs or symptoms
- Indicate patient may be at high risk of a serious adverse event
- request an urgent specialist assessment within 24 hr
Signs or symptoms
- ECG abnormality e.g.
- evidence of ischaemia (pathological Qs, ST or T wave abnormal)
- conduction defects (LBBB, RBBB, WPW, Brugada, any heart block, sinus pause >3 sec)
- prolonged QT interval (abnormal: males >450 milliseconds, females >470 milliseconds)
- marked bradycardia if not on beta-blockers
- Heart failure (history or physical signs)
- Transient loss of consciousness during exertion
- Family history
- sudden cardiac death in people aged <40 yr
- an inherited cardiac condition
- New or unexplained breathlessness or persistently abnormal vital signs
- e.g. hypotension, hypoxia
- Heart murmur
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
Cardiovascular medication
- Adjust
- especially in elderly patients experiencing giddy spells with postural change and occasional syncope
- If, despite stopping antihypertensive medication, severe and symptomatic postural hypotension continues, consider midodrine 2.5 mg 3 times/day (typically on drug chart morning, lunch, teatime) - last dose should not be given at night to prevent supine hypertension. If no improvement titrate up to maximum dose of 10 mg 3 times/day
- only start following discussion with a senior clinician
- Ensure patient and GP receive written instructions of any adjustments
Advise patient
- Avoid precipitating situations
- Maintain hydration
- Avoid becoming overheated
- If warning symptoms occur, take avoiding action
- Advise of the implications of their episode for health and safety at work
- any actions they must take to ensure safety
- Provide patient with advice on driving restrictions as per DVLA guidelines
Simple faint (vasovagal episode)
- Definite Provocational factors with associated Prodromal symptoms
- unlikely to occur whilst sitting or lying (Position)
- benign in nature
- If social circumstances favourable, discharge
Unexplained syncope: Low risk of recurrence
- No relevant abnormality on CVS and neurological examination and normal ECG
- If social circumstances favourable, discharge
Unexplained syncope: High risk of recurrence
High risk clinical features
- Abnormal ECG
- Clinical evidence of structural heart disease
- Sudden syncope occurring whilst driving, sitting, lying, on exertion or resulting in injury
- >1 episode in previous 6 months
- Family history of sudden cardiac death in people aged <40 yr
- Inherited cardiac condition
Admit
- If patient meets frail elderly criteria, request elderly care bed
- If cardiac cause suspected, discuss with cardiologist
Unwitnessed and/or altered awareness with seizure markers
- Strong clinical suspicion of epilepsy but no definite evidence. See First seizure guideline
- refer to first seizure clinic
- if social circumstances favourable, discharge
Referral to falls clinic
- If events frequent and/or patient sustained injuries, consider referral to falls clinic giving:
- relevant medical history
- reason for referral and information about recent falls and falls-related injuries
- details of known contributing factors