Publication date: Available online 10 October 2018
Source: The Journal of Emergency Medicine
Author(s): Jason T. Schaffer, Samuel M. Keim, Benton R. Hunter, Jonathan M. Kirschner, Robert A. De Lorenzo
Abstract
Background
Syncope is a common presentation in the emergency department (ED). The differential diagnosis is long and includes benign conditions as well as acute life threats, such as dysrhythmias or pulmonary embolism.
Objective
The specific goals of this review are twofold: 1) to define the diagnostic utility of orthostatic vital signs (OVS) as a test for orthostatic syncope, and 2) to determine whether OVS help diagnose or exclude life-threatening causes of syncope in ED patients.
Methods
Three prospective cohort studies plus 2017 national guidelines for syncope management were identified, reviewed, and critically appraised.
Results
This literature review found that orthostatic hypotension is common among ED patients with syncope and is often diagnosed as the cause of syncope.
Conclusions
OVS measurements do not, in isolation, reliably diagnose or exclude orthostatic syncope, nor do they appear to have value in ruling out life-threatening causes of syncope.
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