Abstract

We conducted a prospective study to identify clinical factors which predispose institutionalized elderly to syncope. Over 3 years, 97 patients (mean age = 87 ± 6 y) developed syncope. On clinical evaluation, diagnoses fell into two categories: specific diseases including myocardial infarction (6%) and aortic stenosis (5%); and situational stresses including drug-induced hypotension (11%), postprandial syncope (8%), defecation syncope (7%) and postural hypotension (6%). Clinical variables derived from the history, physical examination, and laboratory evaluation of these patients were compared to those of 118 non-syncopal age-matched subjects evaluated in similar fashion. Multivariate analysis identified five independent statistically significant correlates of syncope: coronary artery disease ( p = 0.0003), functional impairment ( p = 0.006), postural blood pressure reduction ( p = 0.003), aortic stenosis ( p = 0.008), and insulin therapy ( p = 0.03). Syncope patients were more likely than controls to have two or more coexistent factors ( p = 0.0001). Syncope in institutionalized elderly is often due to the interaction of multiple coexistent clinical abnormalities which impair cardiovascular compensation for common situational stress.

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