• Europace · Jul 2003

    Multicenter Study

    Management of patients with syncope referred urgently to general hospitals.

    • M Disertori, M Brignole, C Menozzi, A Raviele, P Rizzon, M Santini, A Proclemer, C Tomasi, A Rossillo, F Taddei, A Scivales, R Migliorini, T De Santo, and Evaluation of Guidelines in Syncope Study.
    • Department of Cardiology, Ospedale S Chiara, Trento, Italy.
    • Europace. 2003 Jul 1;5(3):283-91.

    ObjectiveTo evaluate the incidence and the strategy of management of syncope admitted urgently to a general hospital.BackgroundThe management of patients with syncope is not standardized.MethodsThe study was a prospective observational registry from a sample of 28 general hospitals in Italy and enroled all consecutive patients referred to their emergency rooms from November 5th 2001 to December 7th 2001 who were affected by transient loss of consciousness as the principal symptom.ResultsThe incidence of syncope was 0.95% (996 of 105,173 patients attending). Forty-six percent were hospitalized, mostly in the Department of Internal Medicine. The mean in-hospital stay was 8.1+/-5.9 days. A mean of 3.48 tests was performed per patient. A definite diagnosis was made in 80% of cases, neurally-mediated syncope being the most frequent. The findings of each of the 28 hospitals participating in the survey were separately evaluated. We observed great inter-hospital and inter-department heterogeneity regarding the incidence of emergency admission, in-hospital pathways, most of the examinations performed and the final assigned diagnosis. For example, the execution of carotid sinus massage ranged from 0% in one hospital to 58% in another (median 12.5%); tilt testing ranged from 0 to 50% (median 5.8%); the final diagnosis of neurally-mediated syncope ranged from 10 to 78.6% (median 43.3%).ConclusionGreat inter-hospital and inter-department heterogeneity in the incidence and management of syncope was observed in general hospitals. As a consequence, we were unable to describe a uniform strategy for the management of syncope in everyday practice.

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