Abstract

The objectives of this study were to: (1) define the incidence of presyncope and/or syncope in patients with paroxysmal junctional tachycardias, (2) determine their causes, and (3) determine the outcome of symptoms. Syncope is a frequent problem and is often caused by paroxysmal tachycardia. The mechanism of hemodynamic instability is unknown. The population study consisted of 281 patients, consecutively recruited because they had paroxysmal tachycardia and a sinus rhythm on a normal electrocardiogram. Fifty-two patients (group I) had presyncope and/or syncope associated with tachycardia. The remaining patients (group II) had no loss of consciousness. Transesophageal programmed atrial stimulation used 1 and 2 atrial extrastimuli, delivered in a control state, and if necessary, after infusion of 20 to 30 μg of isoproterenol. Arterial blood pressure was monitored. Vagal maneuvers and echocardiogram were performed in all patients. Paroxysmal tachycardia was induced in 51 group I patients and 227 group II patients. Comparisons of groups I and II revealed that age (50 ± 21 vs 49 ± 17 years), presence of heart disease (10% vs 10%), mechanism of tachycardia with a predominance of atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia (70.5% vs 76%), and rate of tachycardia (196 ± 42 vs 189 ± 37 beats/min) did not differ between the groups. However, there were differences in both groups with regard to significantly higher incidences of positive vasovagal maneuvers (35% vs 4%, p <0.01), isoproterenol infusion required to induce tachycardia (55% vs 17%, p <0.001), and vasovagal reaction at the end of tachycardia (41% vs 4%, p <0.05). Thirty-seven group I patients underwent radiofrequency ablation of the reentrant circuit, which suppressed presyncope and/or syncope in 36 of the 37 patients. Thus, presyncope and/or syncope frequently complicated the history of patients with paroxysmal junctional tachycardia (18.5%). Several mechanisms are implicated, but vasovagal reaction was the most frequent cause. Treatment of the tachycardia typically suppressed presyncope and/or syncope.

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